
Class r.^/ 

Book ^f'i^^^y 
Goiiy'ri^litr 



COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT 



FOLDOUT 



FOLDOUT 



A STROLL BY A FAMILIAR RIVER 



Comprising the colloquy of siuinterers by its lower course, 
aur] houseliold words pertainiug to its early history 



^, 




By Wm. E. BAKRY 



KENNERUNK, MAINE, I909 



Enterprise Press. 
Copyrighted, 191 1 






Cci.a:^I4SST- 



INTRODUCTION 



^ 

^ 



Mild Critic 



Interested 
Friend 



Critic 



O interested friend why did you write that historical 
tale of the river? How ill advised it was of you to 
so rush into piint. 

Child, speak not slightingly of our humble annals! Ah 
little think you happy one that the old time is passing 
away, and with it nature's charm in the stream in this its 
eleventh hour. Would you have the scenes and events 
of its waters, and the memory of the yeomen and 
their kindly mates, who have striven with honest toil 
upon its banks to be ignored, and even our Hotilla, 
slight tho' it were, to pass into oblivion unnoticed? 
I am at loss to understand where you fathered so 
much time out mind information and many sayings, 
not to mention tne much discolored manuscripts. Pray 
acquaint me, for how many cycles have you been en- 
gaged in this will-o'-the-wisp chase, and where did 
you scan the much worn papers, and who pleased you 
with credulous tales of old? And what measures of 
tune did you devote to the gathering and arranging 
of these bits of information, and the depicting of these 
scenes and objects in your work ? 



Friend 



Ah, that work which was undertaken as a holiday pastime 
proved "the rather" to be a serious task, claiming 
nearly every leisure hour for quite four seasons! And 
you are well aware that when one becomes possessed 
of a leading thought that rest is misnomer until the 
, task be accomplished. Indeed, the work does com- 
prise all that I ever knew of the stream, and that the 
kindness of many friends, who so willingly aided me in 
the effort by the cheerful giving of information, con- 
tributed to it. 

Truly their aid is a greater pleasure to me in memory 
than is the final accomplishment of the task, for, in- 
deed, without their favor it could not have been car- 
ried to fulfilment. 



Critic 



Friend 



But you have not mentioned the time discolored man- 
uscripts, the early deed, letter contract and legal papers. 

Ah, you remind me ! Touching those ancient papers! 
they are yet legible, and are the belongings of de- 
scendants of those persons to whom they refer. Would 
you wish to view them ? 



Critic 



No — thank you — not with my interest! 

But pray friend where did you gather so much in- 



Friend 



Critic 



telligence relating to the loss of the Horace as you 
style the craft? I would infer from the narration that 
you were really one of the onlookers on that occa- 
sion. You appear to desire to make the past seem 
like the present ! 

Truly you will better comprehend when I assure you 
that more than a score of years since when the in- 
cidents were first gathered and transcribed concerning 
the Horace — the vessel's manager or husband, also 
various townsfolk who viewed the craft's unfortunate 
plight and one other person, who was a member of the 
crew on that night of alarm; were yet with us, and 
questioned concerning the episode, and the files of the 
local "Gazette" of the time were also consulted profitably. 

It suffices me ! 

Surely friend you have labored with an assiduity 
that commands my sympathy, but let us hope for a 
further wish that topics of today and not retrospect, 
will occupy your thoughts and attention hereafter. 

\v, E. B. 



List of Illustrations 



BY W. E. B. 



WAINSCOTING, UNITARIAN PARSONAGE 



Drawing from measurements of the orig- 
inal work. 



STAGE TAVERN 



'' enlarged Erom a contemporary 
photograph. 



MANSION OF RICHARD GILPATRIC 



from a photo, and contemporary 
sketch of building. 



ORNATE WOODWORK, R. GILPATRIC MANSION 



from a sketch of the original 
apartment, but with fireplace 
shown open. 



RICHARD GILPATRIC 



from an old time portrait 



WASHINGTON HALL 



restored with former owner's 
assistance in 1887. 



SITE OF T. LORD S SHIPYARD 



HOMESTEAD OF J. BRAGDON 



enlarged from a photo. 

restored from a contemporary 
sketch, with former dweller's aid. 



EARLY STONE, MONTJOY HILL 



enlarged from a sketch of the 
stone. 



SITE OF J. BUTLAND S SHIPYARD 

BENJ. BROWN, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE 
AND MERCHANT 



enlarged from a photo. 

enlarged from an early painted 
miniature. 



THE "BLACK CLOUD 



enlarged from a sketch of the 
boat. 



THE "gem" 



enlarged from a sketch of the 
craft taken in 1867. 



MOUSAM NAVIGATION Co's. CERTIFICATE 



Photo, from an original certificate. 



A STROLL BY A FAMILIAR RIVER 



DAY THE FIRST 



Ha, ha, this was the day on which we were to take our ramble ! Truly 
it was, but what is that musical gurgle that I hear, the liquid melody of 
running waters ? 

Ah. it is the "Mousum," babbling its perpetual song ! and this day's 
exercise we will christen "A Stroll by a Familiar River," tor we are at 
Mousum river bridge in Kennebunk village. 

Surely so, but has the river ever borne that name, and have the 
premises long been closely covered with housings as at present? 

Well — you must understand that for many years during the early 
settlements hereabouts, when the town of Cape Porpoise claimed this stream 
as its Western boundary, it was styled the Cape Porpoise river, but regard- 
ing the housings, they have existed here almost forever. Permit me to draw 
from my sleeve this antique deed, and we will seek some quiet spot where 
to read it. Here, this sloping bank hints of nature still— Let us begin ! 

"To all people before whom this deed of sale shall come. Greeting. 
Know ye that I James Oare of Wells in ye County of York in this their 
Mag'ty. Province— Territory & Dominion of ye Province of Massachusetts 
Bay in New England, logger, for and in consideration of ye sum one hun- 



dred forty pounds sterling to me well and truly paid in hand by Jonathan 
Corwin, Esq., of ye town of Salem in ye County of Essex and Province 
aforesaid, mercht., ye rect. whereof I do by these presents acknowledge, and 
every part and parcel thereof and therewith to be fully satisfied — content and 
paid, & of evt-ry part and parcel thereof do fully, freely and absolutely acquit, 
exonerate and discharge ye sd Corwin, his heirs, exrs. adms. and assigns 
forever, by these presents have grynitd, bargained and sold, and do by these 
presents further give, grant, bargain, sell, aliene, enfeoffe & confirm unto ye 
aforesaid Jonathan Corwin Esqr., a certain tract of upland and meadow land, 
containing by estimation two hundred acres, be it so much, little, more or 
less, and is situate in ye township of Wells aforesaid at a place called Mou- 
sum — It being Cape Porpoise river falls, and it butted and bounded as fol- 
loweth viz. the land of ye said Corwin north easterly, ye land lying down ye 
river by ye HIGHWAY one hundred and fifty poles and then ye line runs 
E. N. E. by several marked trees so far as seiting off upon a square it makes 
ye aforesaid sum of two hundred acres, ana at ye north easterly end it cuts 
upon ye common lands of ye said town of Wells, all which tract of land afore- 
said, was granted to me ye said Jami^s Oare & Henry Brown and laid out by 
their committee as by ye record of ye said town will plainly appear. Also 
this tract of land contains one DWELLING HOUSE and BARN, FIELDS 
& FENCES — with ye right of trees, wood, brush aid herbage, stones water 
and water courses to him ye said Jonathan Corwin, his heirs, adms. & assigns 
forever* 

2 



To have and to hold ye above granted premises with every part and 
parcel thereof with all ye rights of houses, fences, cultures, improvements, 
trees and timber like trees, wood and underwood, standing, lying or growing 
upon ye same or that ever shall grow upon it, ye grass and herbage — Also ye 
stones, water and water courses, etc. 

I ye said James Oare have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal 
this eighth day of Sept. Annoque Domini sixteen hundred ninety-two — annoq 
Regni, Regis and Regina, Guiellielum & Maria, Anglia &ct Quarto — Signed 
sealed and delivered in the presence of Samuel Wheelwright, Joseph Storer, 
James Converse." 

What, a highway, a house and barn, fields and fences here at Cape 
Porpoise river falls in 1692? 'tis well that you said that housings had existed 
on this land almost forever — Regarding the sounding Latin phrase Regni, 
Regis, etc. it would have pleased me well had he written, "In the fourth year 
of the reign of the King and the Queen, William & Mary of England, etc." 

James Converse, James Converse; was not he the brusque Captain who 
so ably defended Lieut. Joseph Storer's garrison at Wells in the noted 
French and Indian fray of the previous June of the same year? Yes Sir, un- 
doubtedly the same person. What of those "Common lands?'' — As for ye 
Wells Commons or town lands, which extended to ye Mousum river, I will 
say that some 60 years since, two of ye inhabitants ot Kennebunk made it 
their earnest occupation to search for, in ye turnpike region, lots of common 
lands, that ye town of Wells had never deeded to any person, and they found 
several such, and preempted them for their own benefit. 

3 



But I heard you speak of other mementos, the mill and dam of 1674, 
above, at the pasture yonder — Ah yes ! but scant traces remain of those at 
this day — ye friends who traversed that track when boys, 70 years since, did 
see at the low stage of water, or when skating in ye winter, bed logs and the 
row ot r(jcks of ye ancient dam, extending across the stream to the Dr. 
Emerson wharf that was then on the Western Shore. While one of ye old 
time townspeople who was born soon after ye close of the French and Indian 
war, was wont to say that the long river inlet where ye boys now skate in 
wmter, was mide by the Scotch mill men as a raceway for their mill, and if 
you go to the land above on the East Side you will see the depression, now 
almost effaced, where ye mill men's cabin stood the first white man's habita- 
tion in ye town of Kennebunk — and Oh! I mus°d upon those early days, 
when my friend was preparing the cellar of his new house near by some ten 
years since, and discovered two pits or fire-places in ye ground, the one some 
2 f. 6 in. below ye surface, the other scarce beyond one foot. They were 
separated forty ft. and each was 2f. 6 in. diameter, and paved with stones. 
Upon each was a layer of charcoal 6 in. depth and yet quite fresh, reminders 
of ye Indians' or white folks' tires, I scarce know which. 

Oh, yes. Friend, those happenings were so long ago, but may we 
awake to an interest in more modern objects and happenings as we stand 
here by the bridge — Inform me. Friend, What is that imposing white dwell- 
ing upon the brow of the hili yonder? Oh, the Unitarian Parsonage you 

4 



mean? Well, from the appearance of its parts I reckon that house to have 
been built about ye year 1787, and well builded indeed it was, with its great 
chimney resting upon a cellar-high foundation nearly i 2 ft, square of granite 
blocks, and with various of its wall boardings feather edged the better to 
refuse the weather, and ye chimney side of its foreroom elaborately set out 
from floor to ceiling with raised wood panels, moulded door caps, fireplace 
panel and classic cornice, after ye best fashion of Batty Lan^ley, and consider 
ye well used brick fireplace, with its iron crane. Then ye chamber above the 
foreroom is almost as well wrought as it. You must know that soon after 
the year 1800 one Deacon John Low lived in this house with his wife Rachel 
she having been the daughter of Col. Ebenezer Francis who so gallantly 
fought, and fell at ye battle of Hubbardston, when the American Gen. 
Schuyler's rear-guard opposed the advance of ye British Gen. Burgoyne. A 
gallant officer was Col. Francis to offer his life upon his country's altar ! 

Ah! Somewhat for little folks to see and listen to in Kennebunk, near 
60 years ago, when they heard the resonant humming, and shyly peeping in 
at ye kitchen door of this same old house, beheld Becky and Sally, the two 
domestics of ye Widow Rachel, spinning the woolen yarn on ye great 
spinning wheel. 

Truly, Friend, tho^e were different times from these, but what is that 
imposing three storied structure just across the way, and so dignified, the old 
tavern. I suppose? Yes, and it causes me to smile when I think of the stal- 

5 



wart Dominicus Lord who previously lived there in a small house, from 
which the present structure was enlarged, fifing all ye way from the top of 
the hill down and over into the village, at the news of ye battle of Lexington, 
to call the military company together in the old Revolutionary times. Lively 

days those for the town ! And did you ever hear of one Capt. John H 

who before the middle of the last century bargained for ye old tavern of the 
former owner, Bro. Nathl. Jefferds ; and of his giving him in exchange for it, 
a brig with her cargo all stowed, her sails bent, all ready for sea ? Now you 
must understand that in those days ye people did not have that faith in the 
government such as they now have, and ye Captain shared the feeling some- 
whit I suppose, for it is related that he was wont to keep $500 in specie by 
him at all times in the event that ye country should go to wrack — a plank as 
it were by which to save one's self on. And you must also know that the 
Captain owned the territory back of ye tavern where Hovey Street now is 
and much more land besides over that way. 

Ha! ha! maybe you young folk have never heard of the threatened 
Madawaska war at the Eistward. near those times, when ye boundary conten- 
tion arose, and our government urged recruits into the affected territory in 
numbers! and "Wonders" who should gallop up with driver, horses and 
equipage, with all speed into ye tavern yard on the hill, but the great 
General Scott. In ye tavern was a commodious sofa, nearly 9ft. in length 
between ye arms, and which friend C now has, and erstwhile the host- 






M 







#^ 



P 




lers were unshackling ye panting horses, and leading out a new rela}- of animals, 
the General strode into ye tavern, and refreshing himself with a glass of wine 
and an egg, lay down to rest on the great sofa, and long as it was he occupied 
nearly the entire space. Ah, an imposing figure the General made with his 
long military cloak, and chapeau with plume ! Presently he arose, strode 
out, embarked, and in a twinkling was away tor the Border. 

Many a tale of public occasion would ye walls of the old house relate, 
could they speak ! May long life and prosperity attend it ! 

Come, we must go ! No, no, delay a moment until I di-scribe to you 
the third of the trio of great houses to which the traveller bade adieu as he 
departed fom the village on the West side! The dwelling of Richard Gil- 
patric I mean. It stood upon the E. slope just below ye tavern, though later 
removed. It was of ample dimensions, with wide spreading gambrel roof, 
plentifully pierced with windows, and with chambers completed to ^-e upper 
pitch of roof, wood dados, moulded cornices, fluted pilasters, ramped stair 
work and other finish of plain, but honest style. Hard by at the rear sat 
barn and sheds while on the brow of the hill near by, rested the great barn, 
nearly seventy ft. in length. You must know that this self-made merchant 
called all ye land on the West bank of the river from the bridge to far below 
the head of tide, also the open territory at the rear of the house, some 240 
acres altogether, his own. Ah, Sir, when 1 muse on this old estate I must 
strike my cane upon ye bridge, and chant with ye poet, of the times — 

7 



' flbll'llh'UT 




O 
< 



Q 
< 

o 

(5 



z 
o 

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*"When men lived in a grander way with ampler hospitality." Now, let us 
leave this place ! But wait, would you not like to hear oi Ye "Mousum 
Manufacturing Water Privilege" of 1825 ? Why certainly, if it will not take 
long — Proceed ! 

I will tell thee, that in ye year 1825 one Mr. Jesse Varney of Dover, 
considering that the Mousum river must be wanted for more manufacturing 
use purchased of local owners ye privileges here, which included a territory 
of near 90 acres on ye East. side of the stream, almost wholly below the 
bridge, and a plot of 60 acres on the West side, opposite it; and ye ancient 
Cat Mousum land and mill above ; and besides, much land on ye East & 
West sides of ye stream at Fluellen's or Old Falls, and a part of ye "Great 
Mill Lot" on the road to Moulton's mills. Now of ye buildings situate on 
the river here then ! On the East side, scarce 4 ft. above ye brido-e, with 
gables up and down ye stream, was the broad, low pitch roofed Storer mill 
of olden time, and at ye back side there was a gap in ye wall-boardino- 
through which ye saw-carriage came almost to the bridge when the mill was 
working, and it also ran outside the mill at ye upper end, where was the 
draw slip descending into ye water. While a little above, where now is a 
green field, was a mill yard. And do you not remember when some lucky 
person kicked up an English shilling there? And of the great freshet when 
some of ye water left the mill pond, and ran East of ye mill across ye high- 

*I-,on^fcllow 



-^ 



way, and the carpenter and his crew were called out at night to raise dams 
on ye present Water Street to save ye lower mill ? 

• On the East side by the highway the land was plentifully stored with 
logs leaving scarce room for the mail coach to pass — Ah, well I recall the 
day when ye selectmen busked about to clear the main street in ye village 
and on Zion's Hill also, so choked were they with teams of oxen with timber ! 
On the lower side of ye bridge, and in a hollow as it were, sat the smallish 
grist mill of antient date as well, for when Esquire Lord was improving it, 
some 50 years ago, what should his son draw out from behind ye wall casing 
where it had long rested, but this time-stained letter. Listen now while I 
read it. It is sealed with a red wafer, and beginning with a broad dash is 
superset ibed to John Storer Esqr. at Wells, and sent in care of Jos. Sayer 
Esqr. 

•'Boston Decbr 4th 1746 — Bro. Storer. 1 should have sent yr 
lanthorn by Perkins but he was gone, also should have sent some mer- 
chandize to yr sons but could not gett them ready — but by ye next I shall 
send if you and they think titt. wee are al well & hope you & yrs are — my 
Duty to mother & Loves to you & yr Family — rest yr Loving Bro. 

Eb: Storer" 
In the semitransparent paper is the stamp of Great Britain — G. R. (George 
Rex) or king & the impression of ye crown. 

At ye lower dam on this E. side, stood a 2-storied house-shaped 

9 



RlCHARD"*"lJrL^ATRTcT~^^f^C'HANT * 




building, of some bigness, painted red, and belonging to the Gilpatric and 
Jefferds families. This was a fulling mill, where wool was carded and some 
weaving done at times. On this same side, and also beginning at ye highway 
where ye Water St. is now situate, but skirting ye river the whole distance, 
and six rods wide, crossing the island and extending below the head of tide 
water, was the "Town Road", laid out m Revolutionary days. 

On the Western bank, at ye lower edge of the bridge was yet another 
fulling mill, owned by Nath'l. Jefferds Esq., and below it stood a building 
near 40 ft. square used for grinding bark. Succeeding this was a two storied 
barn. Then upon the bank of the river below stood a dwelling house of one 
and two stories combined, and yet farther down the stream was a tan yard. 
Now in 1828, Mr. Jesse Varney sold all of these possessions to various mer- 
chants in Philadelphia and Dover, N. H., retaining 1-8 interest himself, while 
a small holding was retained by William Lord Esq. president, and the Mou- 
sum Manufacturing Co. was organized, and planned to do great works on ye 
old stream — Before 1S30 they had bailt a mill of two stories and a basement 
upon ye Western bank below ye bridge, much resembling ye present mill 
there, but longer and with a tower upon ye side with a bell. Just below the 
structure was a picker building joined to ye mill by a covered passage way 
on the upper ground story through which to carry ye laps and belt for making 
the unbleached cotton cloth. 

What of the motive power of this manufactory. Sir ? Ah yes ! in the 

10 



basement of ye mill, at the upper end near ye bridge, the water brought by , 
the canal with thick plank sides and oak-log covering, beneath ye highway, 
fell on the wheel a little back of its centre, from a platform or shelf i6 ft. 
wide — And such a wooden wheel as it was! i6 ft wide horizontally, and 
20 ft. in diameter vertically — and revolving backwards on its iron axle instead 
of forward as does ye overshot style. This was the ponderous "Breast wheel," 
a construction long since extinct The theory of the Mfr. Co., was to line ye 
West bank ot the river with quite six mills, reaching from ye bridge to beiow 
the island and head of tide, and all drawing water from the one canal when 
there was scarce more than sulificient water to carry one great wheel like that 

used. 

Below ye mill at ye lower dam was a machine shop belonging to the 
Mfi. Co. where some of the cotton machines, and also tools to construct them 
were made — and succeeding this building were the rough sheds and the store 
house of the Cotton P'actory — It was into the latter small barn that an affrighted 
deer, then a rare animal here, and very poor, and utterly exhausted, was pur- 
sued. After being cornered it was captured by the watchman ot the mill 
The co-npany also had a long, one storied counting room, and very pleasant 
It was, by ye highway, the West end was fitted up with a high accountant's 
desk, while the East end served as a cloth room ; here young girls folded the 
cotton cloth. The location of ye mill was very pleasant also, with a green 
bank nearby, and all things about the premises were kept in very neat order. 

1 1 



Why do you smile? Oh, I am thinking of an Englishman named 
Christopher Coates who was employed here years ago, and who lived in ye 
old fashioned hipped roof house, the last one then on ye East side of the 
Wells road You must know that his brother sent two large tumblers to him 
from England ; possibly they were ale mugs. Each had a motto upon it. 
Upon one was "Be good to my boy Mary" — on the other, "Drink to me 
Chris." 

Well, the Company must do farming as well as other work, and on ye 
Eastern side of the river below ye present Kennebunk house was their large, 
plain farm l)arn, with end to the street, and with a cellar, tie up and hay- 
mows and where three or four yoke of working oxen were kept, also farming 
implements; and much farming and other work was done, and not a few men 
employed. Not a wise undertaking for a manufacturing Co. — surely. The 
building was afterwards burned, and the depression of its cellar and founda- 
tion is yet to be seen there. 

.\nd now ye Mfr. Company must needs have a saw mill, consequently 
they removed ye- red fulling mill on the East side by the lower dam, and built 
a long saw mill and painted it yellow. And here also was ye fence and gate, 
that enclosed the Company's pasture property, and inside which the towns- 
people gathered on Thanksgiving day for ye turkey shoot. All of the Com- 
pany's pasture, field and woodland on ye East side of the river here, was en- 
closed by a good board and post fence, and two hundred of their three hun- 

12 



dred acres at ye Old Falls were fenced in also; which with ye farmintr, sawing, 
etc., was expending the funds to small purpose. By ye West end of the 
bridge was a large, flat stone lying in ye ground, with the date 1830 upon it, 
which was the year that the mill was is full operation. It so continued until 
1850 when it was burned. It is surmised that the Mfr. Co. bought some of 
ye Barque Horace's cotton ; the vessel that was stranded on Boothby's beach 
70 years ago. The Agent of ye mill lived in ye great house with a railing on 
the roof, beneath ye Lexington elms. From a period beginning some 15 
years after ye machinery was set a running the Company made profit, but at 
other times they are said to have fared but slimly, the managing of such a 
concern being then not as well understood as at present. 

Thanks ! but pray tell me what of the tiny, gambreled roof house, like 
a child's toy, over yonder on the "Town Road!'' Ah, that little yellow 
dwelling was erected quite 100 years since, and perhaps more, by one Bro. 
Littlefield ! You must know that it then rested somewhat above its present 
location, and sat on the sloping river bank, with its considerable chimney, 
fireplaces and oven. Below, at the rear, facing the stream was a cellar kitchen, 
very neat, and cased around with boards, and a full story above ground. The 
chambers were small but cosey, and at the upper end of ths tiny house was a 
small porch, and there were steps on the street side leading down the em- 
bankment to the basement. Wrought iron nails secured ye clapboardsof the 
little building, and under the corner boards birch bark was laid. Here in ye year 



i8i2, lived Joseph Curtis, Esq. the principal tanner of the town and prominent 
citizen. 

Come— we will not linger here longer, but stray down ye stream by 
the "Town Road !" Now we must pause a moment, for here below ye later 
saw mill at the lower dam, was in years past a ford, where teams and 
travellers were wont to cross the river, and hereabouts was the first bridge 
also. Ah, and when I was a boy very good sea trout were to be caught in 
these rapids ; while later, above the nearby dam* a small salmon was entrapped. 

Look to yon high bank on the western side ! In some spots ye spade 
can scarce be driven down two span because of the rusty iron-ore gravel, and 
besides, there are veins of Pyrites, which is iron ore in crystals, very pleasing 
to discover. And as I recall it, one of ye antient men who lived on this 
"Town Road" long since, related that some of the ore for the Iron works 
once at ye Island below, was obtained in the Factory pasture near by. Now 
we have nearly reached the head of ye Island, and the site of the Iron Works 
dam of Revolutionary days and afterward ; also of its mill pond, which flowed 
back to the country road, situate then lower down the stream than at present. 
And if you kick around in the soil of the Island here you will find large pieces 
of the old slag. And did not forgeman Moses Blaisdell once labor here— he 
who owned three days' right in these works, and dwelt on ye mount later 
called Zion's hill and in the L. part of the present Hon. R. W. Lord's mansion, 
where are the oak floor timbers, and birch bark is laid beneath ye clapboards? 

■4 



But is there aught of interest concerning the small inlet crossed by a 
bridge just abreast the West side of the Island, and with the sunken land 
beyond it? I am reminded by it of some earlier river channel — Truly so 
friend, you shall hear that one of our former aged residents once assured me 
that long ago, when his grandparent was a youth, a great ireshet coursed 
this stream, which then Howed in a loop far around to the East in the pasture 
yonder. Then ye river began to force a passage for itself through the narrow 
neck of land at the extreme West side. This the people seeing they were 
pleased with, and aided the stream, and the new channel was formed. 

You have heard of ye great Harrison celebration of the town in the year 
1 84 1, have you not? When the procession formed in Green lane and other 
town-ways, and a platform supporting a log cabin with a wild animal's skin 
tacked on ye wall and with a cider cask at ye door was drawn thro, the village 
by six horses. And it amuses me as I think that when the people were busy 
other ways, one of ye simple- folk stole up, and turned ye spiggot of the cask, 
but it was empty. On the platform, besides a country man with bow and 
viol, dancing, was a swivel mounted, and as ye procession drew past ye 
Washington hall where the Town house now stinds, they shot off the swivel, 
and fractured all of ye glass in the watch-maker's window there. Yes. sir, 
'twas so ! Well, then, besides, at the Eastern side of the Factory pasture 
yonder, the great dining tent of that day was pitched, the people loaning 
their silverware for the feast, and as ye tent remained spread over Sunday — 

15 



ye men and boys from the meeting-house went down there after service, and 
helped themselves to all of the edible bits that remained. Ah, the old town 
saw happy days then ! 

Have I not heard rumors of numerous fishing boats having been 
owned upon this stream, and even ol a shipyard near by in former days ? 
Truly so. Here on the lower Eastern bank, opposite the Island, at the head 
of tide, where 50 years since fine shad-fish were netted, was a boat landing 
where two fishing^ craft lay. "But espy there, friend, a triHe below where the 
ravine lies beneath the high West bank, commanding a fine view of the inter- 
vale and winding river. There where the brooklet flows into the stream was 
the shipyard, where, as ye antient people have solemnly afifirmed, one Lieut. 
Tobias Lord lately returned from Gen. Gates's army on the Hudson river, 
and other persons succeeding him, until later than the year 1800 built small 
vessels and launched them slightly up the stream. And indeed, has not our 

own Capt. C , now healthful and robust, overheard ye old people relate in 

times past of a vessel's frame having been set up in this same ship yard with- 
in their remembrances, and were not handfuls of blacksmith's spikes turned up 
by the plow on the site of ye shipyard in recent years, and do not the bed-logs 
of ye launching-ways yet remain there beneath the tun' in good condition ? 
Truly they do, sir! Cross and see for yourself, friend, cross and see for your- 
self ! And it is told by one person that vessels which were built hereabouts 
before the year 1800 were registered in York, and that craft launched on ye 

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Mousum were floated around to Arundel on ye other river, to be provided 
with sails, spars and top hainper for lack of good accommodations for that 
work here. At this yard in the summer of 1800 was constructed by Nath'l 
Cousens, Jr., ye brig Rose of 179.0S tons, and of which Nath'l Frost was 
the chief owner. 

See yonder, on the East shore opposite ye ship yard! There was the 
'•Town Landing" lying at the foot ot the "Town Road" — Observe, the stream 
now flows over a ford with even, gravelly floor, Eastward and very pleasantly 
as it borders a meadow, and has a drooping elm tree or two upon its Western 
bank — and below you will see a rtrm dyke reared upon the mound of yet 
another of an earler time, and but a bit farther on you may trace the undula- 
ting, irregular ridge of a long disused beaver dam, which meanders from yon 
springy, wooded bank, above the meadow to the slightly elevated portion of 
the river shore. And, companion, formerly when elderly fishermen were 
passing on the stream in their boat they would call the attention of one 
another to the sunken land that the ruined dam enclosed, and exclaim — "Ah, 
the beaver pond is fast becoming chocked with river refuse!" Now, in this 
neighborhood the channel is somewhat obstructed by large bowlders, and 
look, here on the East side lies ye remains of a long disused fishing boat 
falling to pieces amid the shrubbery. And now upon the same shore we 
reach the site of a former, small fishing establishment. It was a low roofed, 
closed in, padlock'^d shelter, where various masts, sails and oars were stowed. 

17 



Here Master Cousens's two masted fishing boat la}-, and ye large boat of one 
Mr. Leach. Other boats made fast at the slight wharf as they passed up or 
down the stream, for then it was the habit of their owners to drop down the 
river and out to sea in the afternoon, fish all through ye night, and enter the 
river again with the tid<; on the following day. Directly below this place, 
upon the same bank of ye stream, you will discover a considerable dyke of 
olden time, with trees growing upon it, and, formerly mounded up to reclaim 
ye sedge of the brackish meadow that skirts the neighboring woods. Cast 
your glance yonder to the other shore, where the field slopes down to the 
stream — for there was the fishing stand of Mr. Richard Wormwood; 'twas 
where his two masted fishmg boat lay — and Oh, so unfortunate was he, to be 
o'ertaken by ye waves when fishing in his decked fishing boat "'Cascade!'" 

I must tell you that many a fishing craft of that time possessed a small 
cabin wherein a cup of tea might be brewed or a meal prepared. 

Scan, friend, the territory below there lying on this East Shore, styled 
60 years since the Wise pasture. It has yet a noticeably long embankment, 
now o'ergrown with wild shrubbery and some large trees. This shut ye tide 
out from a meadow joining the pasture bat now covered thickly with reeds 
and bushes. .At ye lower ead of this dyke is the trace of a considerable dock. 
It was formerly hollowed from ye soil with much labor, and at its land end 
sat a small fish house, whil: on its upper side was a timber wharf where a 
decked, two masted fishing boat or smaller craft often lay. 

18 



But the red sky warns us ot the day's close. Look, the dusk is deep • 
ening *"aniid the alders green!'' We must betake ourselves to our cosey 
homes, and resume our stroll when another fair morn shall break. 

•J. Keats 



19 



DAY THE SECOND 



The morning's greeting to you friend! We will begin our stroll anew. 
It was here at the Wise pasture that we left the stream at evening. Now 
look over yonder at the high West shore where ye river bank is bordered 
with oaks, for beyond and above them upon the extensive field, commanding 
the welcome outlook, in the midst of planting, is the slight depression with a 
foundation rock or two, and scant fragments of brick scattered about — of ye 
former citizen, Edward Evans's house. How early 'twas there I can scarce 
tell you. However, his witness mark was attached to ye will of William 
Larrabee at the fort below on this stream in 1727, and 'tis said that his people 
came from Arundel — And Oh, it touches me with sorry when the thought 
arises of his two worthy sons who so sturdily marched to Fort Edward in ye 
Old French war to fight ye battles of King George II. But their young lives 
were cut short by ye ambushment of the cruel salvages. Ah, how oft they 
have labored on those familiar lands over yonder, and at eve rested by the 
now vanished hearth stone. Alas, alas ! 

A tragic memory sir, surely — but inform me what may be the pursuit 
of the two persons in the boat that we see in the stream below, the one at the 
oars and his comrade standing in the stern of the craft, and carrying along 
pole with which he strikes into the shore shallows of the stream — can those 



be eel-spearers ? Certainly Sir, & I reckon that they have taken this 

morn near a hundred of the slippery creatures, which as the cool weather 
approaches burrow in their muddy beds— but are brusquely drawn out with 
the spear, and tind a ready sale in the near by city. 

Behold, we have now descended the river to the bend, where on the 
Eastern shore are deep ravines sloping to the water. Here also is ye former 
beaver brook, and a little above us, on this rill, is the reputed grave of ye Indian; 
he who was slain while stooping to examine his traps, buried, & his musquet 
thrown into the trench with him, but 'tis said, 'twas later exhumed and is above 
ground yet, but 1 know not. Plowever, this I do know, that little children 
gathering berries in ye pasture So years ago, feared to visit ye guiley where 
the Indian grave lay. Now some 70 yf^ars gone by, a young gent of the 
town enamored of the chase, chancing to cross this rill near where it splashes 
into ye river espied a cluster of fair sea trout in its shallow waters, doubtless 
swam there to spawn, & there-upon captured them in his hands. Thus elated 
he set a day for his friends to dine with him— but my informant was not one 
of the invited guests, else, mayhap, he had forgotten the incident ere this 
time. And here at the abrupt elbow in the river where it flows Southerly & 
has a high. Eastern bank, the land above was once an open farm, but now is 
grown thick with saplings bright with autumn foliage. This turn of the 
water was early styled the "Gould Roundabout" but later 'twas the Kelley 
bend because of ownership of adjoining land, but on the hil! top you will 

23 



discover the cellar sinkage of the early inhabitants house. He too was a 
comer from Arundel, & did not Ebenezer Emmons also witness the will of 
VVm. Larraby ? And here 'twas that Samuel Emmons dwelt before the 
middle of ye i8th century & ended his days on this spot, but his four sons 
and one daughter removed to ye town of Coggshall or Lyman, where one of 
their offspring who was ye first boy-child born there, received a grant of i6o 
acres of land from the town. The family later extended thro' all this region. 
A bit below the location of the house and on the river bank was their place of 

family sepulture, and I have heard say how that some 50 years ago one of 
ye family folk coming here, successfully searched for and carried away with 
him ye dust of one of his ancestors. 

Tho. the trace of the Emmons house spot is now so scant, yet in 
later times, a neighbor assures me, that one Mr. Pendleton Fletcher, even, 

abode here. 

Now we will proceed, and traverse this highland amid the young trees, 
and descend to the open, river bank, to where the stream agam t]ows Easterly. 
Behold, here is yet another long meadow of salt or sedge grass skirting the 
river and woods, and notice, it also was once protected by an e.xtended dyke, 
but long since neglected, and overgrown with bushes and trees. At this 
spot, many years gone by, was ye shed-like structure for harboring of fishing 
gear of one Captain Joseph Hatch, and in the stream his fishing boats lay. 
And now friend, should we follow the river a short distance below, we would 

24 



find an inflowing creek, also the same meadow extending there, and the dyke 
continuing to the wooded hillside beyond, and presently emerging from the 
low trees in the Larrabee vicinage, we would discover a considerable marsh 
with the trace of a dyke bordermg the river for a short way ; but we will not 
journe}- there, our eel fishers w\\\ ferry us o'er to the high Western bank, 
pleasantly shaded by oak trees. Now I will inform you that on this rising 
ground where was formerly a field, but which is now grown with youngish 
trees, was in ye last part of the ,i8th century the home of John Bragdon. the 
forebear of all of ye families of that name hereabout. And what shall we 
say of him? I will again draw from my garment ye book and read the lines 
from the poet, *''It is the sword of a good Knight, Though homespun was 
his coat of mail ; What matter if it be not named Joyeuse, Colada, Durindale, 
Excalibar, or Aroundight." For was he not a major in ye Revolutionary war, 
and a descendant of Arthur Bragdon, councillor of ye city of Gorgeana, 
planted by ye great Sir Ferdinando Gorges, knight, and did not the sam« 
Arthur Bragdon with his wife Mary, disembark at what is now ye near by 
town of York in ye long ago time of 1634 ? Most truly he did, friend ! 

Now at ye time when the early house was here, there was not the well 
laid out road from the village on the West shore of the river as at present, 
but a path or cart track only, roughand circuitous, near the river, with bridges 
over ye gulleys, but later when the present road was plotted, the worthy man 
abandoned his early habitation, & reared for his family a low, broad, one-storied 

*I.ongfellow 

25 




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house, & a barn West of it, by the new highway. Here his hardy sons were 
reared. A.nd for one he built a new dwelling, & divided the home farm that 

he might not stray for work to the nearby ship-building town He it was 

who ever after followed the plow, and breathed his latest breath with hand 
upon it. And here, ye sober folk subdued the wild land with ye grubbing hoe, 
an implement the one part hoe, the other part axe, & by which were cut and 
destroyed the tree roots that hamper cultivation. Another route must now 
be found from the new highway to the lowland of the farm. Therefore ye 
river farmers gathered to assist their neighbor, and formed the deep cut 
through the hillside yet to be seen there — which when completed, one of their 
number — ascending the hillock & touching his hat to his fellows, rendered an 
impromptu verse befitting ye occasion. 

Gurgling down ye wooded gulley on the farm's North side was a little 
brook, where the cattle were driven to water in winter, & which was styled 
''Mile Brook," because it was a mile from ye village. 

Now a trifle below this settlement, & in the midst of the field yonder, 
bordering the river, which again flows to the North, and where on the steep 
bank landslides with trees and bushes were wont to descend into ye stream — 
was the small, one storied home, & also the barn sheltering two yoke of well 
grown oxen, of one William Wormwood, a considerable farmer, who had for- 
merly dwelt upon Great Hill, and who in descent was from the early pioneer 
of that family name, at ye fort on the East shore opposite. 

26 



And now plodding by ye edge of the field we appear to have reached 
the homestead of James Fernald ot ye former time. You must know that the 
antient dwellmg was a smallish, one storied, low eaved larm house without an 
L-that stood at ye end of the lane in front of and a bit S. & E.of the present 
house, which fronts the tall elm trees and brook that meanders thro, the 
neighboring meadow and marsh to the river yonder. In the middle of the 
ancient bldg. was a considerable chimney with an oven — )n the brook side of 
the house was a door, while another one was at its lower end. Its windows 
were wanting, but when the new house was built the older structure was to 
be seen, serving for the storage of corn and farming implements, and the 
children were wont to play in and about it. West of the house in the lane 
sat the capacious barn, also of the earlier time \ meadow and marsh formed 
parts of the farm, the salt hay from the latter being secured every season. 
From the Western, wooded meadow bank a dyke crossed the creek with a 
plank barrier, the course of the stream being diverted, and extended to the 
opposite higher land, which is an extensive field sloping from the house to 
the river At the water side a boat was often moored, by which members of 
the family were frequently "set across" to the opposite shore upon one errand 
or another. 

At ye highway upon the hill top beyond the brook was a g-assy road- 
way, used only by the country dwellers, and passing Westerly, mid fields and 
woods, to ye Easterly highland of the town of Wells. 

27 



The family was a large one, and comprised 13 young folk of varying 
ages, and besides, two little ones had been called home. Happy was the 
rural life that these good farm residents enjoyed, for it was the custom at that 
day for neighbor to visit neighbor and sup together, the children accompany- 
ing their parents and sharing in the happy occasion We will now journey 
onward, passing through this long lane, where on its upper side at the high- 
way was formerly a small, gable roofed schoolhouse for the few children of 
the neighborhood, and visit another home site of early days, situate on land 
near the river and sloping pleasantly toward it. This was the dwelling place 
in 1739 and earlier of Thomas Wormwood Jr., and companion, you will be- 
come acquaint with the value of land at that far away day when I inform you 
that in this same year, it being the thirteenth of Geo. II, the yoeman men- 
tioned paid ye sura of twelve pounds for a parcel of salt marsh but i 1-2 acres 
in extent, situate upon a small cove of the river, at a little distance below his 
dwelling. 

On the marsh slightly above the creek, and near the river, now observe 
a green plot, covered only by the higher tides, 'twas where the men folk of 
the farm were wont to rear the marsh hay ricks — the "Stack-yard" of days 
gone by, and but a bit above it .may yet be traced the mound of dyke, which 
barred the salt water from the creek, and enclosed the fresh meadow, and 
which locality has ever since been styled — Ye "Wormwood Cove." Above 
the houbC, upon a sandy knoll, near the traveled road was the family burial 

28 



plot of succeeding days, neatly enclosed, and which was used as early as 
1796 Previous to which period the family, which had removed from the 
Eastern bank of the river bilow the fort, had transferred its lost members 
to that shore and the antient burial-place there, by boat, and ever, in after 
years, a skii^ was moored by the brink of the stream at the farm, in which 
members of the household might cross to the Eastern sho: e when desiring to 
visit the village above, because of the shorter journey thither. The low, one 
storied, old time house, with rafters of hard pine, which has since been re- 
moved from this to the adjoining farm below it — sat upon a green bank facing 
the South — Its entry-way and large chimney were in the middle oi the front, 
and on either side was a comfortable room — one having a high dado and pro- 
jecting posts in the angles. Without, at the East corner of the bldg. was the 
house-well, while another for the cattle was near the large, ancient barn, 
which rested West ot the dwelling — it then being a quite universal custom 
in N. England to place that bldg. thus, whenever possible, that it might not 
be endangered by sparks from the great wood fires of the house chimney, the 
prevailing winds ot the year being from the West — Ha, ha, companion. Do 
you recall how 'twas sang of "Acadie, home of the happy .^'' 

*'In doors, warm by the wide-mouthed fireplace, idly the farmer 

Sat in his elbow-chair, and w itched how the flames and the smoke-wreaths 

Struggled together like foes in a burning city. Behind him, 

Nodding and mocking alung the wall, with gestures tantastic 

Darted his own huge shadow, and vanished away in the darkness." 

*Longfello\v 

29 



Nearer the house was the carriage-shed and corn-loft, while in a hollow- 
between the house and the river stood the hut for the swine, and at the West 
end and rear of the dwelling, and also extending from it toward the stream 
was an extensive orchard. In removing the roots of these trees in after 
years, a very large belt, brass buckle of antique pattern, broad and embossed, 
was turned up, but which very soon dropped to pieces so long had it lain be- 
neath the turt — The strong hay-land of the premises West of the house was 
wont to be styled the "Upper field" — while that to the South was known as 
the "Lower field," and where in later days an arrow head was turned \ip in 
plowing, also a piece of old time curiously figured bluewire, but that soon 
crumpled to pieces. Thrifty folk the river husbandmen were, and farmer 
Wormwood ever in his two barns laid by a season's supply of hay & corn & 
other produce in advance, agamst a year of short harvest, while in his stalls 
two yoke of matured oxen, and other two of growintr steers rustled the maize 
stalks as the short winter days drew near.. 

And now friend we will take boat as did the family of former days, 
and ascend & cross the stream at a small distance above. And here we are 
at the Easterly border of the Larrabee marsh before described, and at the 
bend of the river also, where is a creek's mouth, which once had a greater 
depth of water than at present, and where by a slight wharf then lay the fish- 
ing boat of James Larrabee. And now we will ascend the sloping field. But 
pray what may the slight railed enclosure and dark head boards betoken — a 



place of interment? Truly so friend — of the two prominent mounds that you 
see in the enclosure, the nearer one is the resting place of Sergeant Stephen 
Larrabee, the patron and commander of the near by fort, and the other that 
of his wife Miriam — The head pieces shadowed by the shrubbery are those 
of members of the hamlet or neighborhood. And the descendants of ye 
family aver that one or two Indians rest hereabouts as well, & that there were 
not above four mounds of white folks on this lower spot, but that above, 
near the brow of hill in the field jonder, where was once the palisaded garrison 
and its accompanying cabins, or the Larrabee village as it was styled — which 
was really the first permanent settlement of the town — there where you seethe 
memorials and rude headstones & boards and also continuing along by the 
edge of the near by ravine, were to be se^^n long since, many mounds lying 
every which way, and the names of various of their sleepers were known to 
ye people of that time. And, indeed friend, was there not an interment at the 
garrison scarce above 50 years since, when ye people came from the road, 
making a way through ye snow in the field, that some silent one might rest 
with kith and kin at last? Surely there was! 

Now gaze about you from the top of this hill, how fair the river is wind- 
ing down from ye turn above ; see the flushed Western sky beyond the high 
banks yonder, and espy down ye river by yon sloping field and grove of oaks 
there, and beyond the more distant marshes and placid river, bordered on the 
West side by ye old farms, and see the great hill, and ye vessels sail on the 
twinkling sea that limits our view in that direction. 

31 



It would appear, follower, that William Larrabee, the pioneer upon this 
ground, and formerly a refugee from indian aggressions at the Eastward, was 
the son of a French immigrant to this country, who now, 'tis said, rests in 
the antient burial ground on Montjoy hill in the near city of Portland, also 
that William had kindred, possibly a brother, at N. Yarmouth, the settlement 
from which he fled, because of the will of a dweller in that town made in 1737, 
and yet extant, which bears the name of Stephen Larrabee, and also mentions 
a wife Margaret — sons Stephen & John, daughters Hannah & Margaret, and 
the possession of a house, barn, & loo acres of land besides live stock. 

Yet far worse did William fare when he came to dwell in Arundel, for 
while securing the salt hay, ye heartless Indians entered his house, throwing 
their hatchets at ye children and the wife lying upon the couch. And was 
not the coverlet of it long kept by the family, and afterwards converted into 
small bags and given to the grandchildren and other descendants of ye 
family ? And is not one of these tokens yet to be seen ? Truly so. Sir. 

Well companion, our fancies may present a picture of the heavily tim- 
bered forest, and the smoking clearings of the pioneer settlers of Kennebunk, 
but from the following writing of the good man William Larrabee, the 
neighborhood of the fort was far from being entirely a wilderness country 
then. 

He emphasizes that the document which I show to you is his last will 
and testament, and in it commits his spirit to God who gave it, and his re- 

32 





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mains to the earth to be decently buried, and bestows upon his well beloved 
son Stephen Larraby (who was later ye Sergeant) his dwelling, and land con- 
taining loo acres, with all his marsh or meadow, the son paying all his lawful 
debts. To his wife Kathrine he gives a third part of his estate, and to his 
eldest daughter Bethia Look 6 pounds. To his daughter Sarah one cow and 
calf, 6 pounds in money and 40 acres of land. To his daughter Easter a 
heifer of two years old, 6 pounds in money and 40 acres of land. And to his 
son Stephen all his right and interest in North (doubtless meaning his pos- 
sessions in North Yarmouth) and also the remainder of his estate not disposed 
of already, and appoints him to be his executor and to pay all legacies within 
three years' time — the standard of value to be in "currant or mowing land" 
and sets his hand and seal to the paper April 25, 1727. 

An honorable record indeed friend of one who had been forced to flee 
two homes, losing one family wholly by ye enemy and beginning domestic 
life anew. Yet in his providence to his family by his comfortable property 
begotten by honest labor, it presents a pleasant picture of the Kennebunk 
life of that early day. 

Now look afield. Interested one, toward ye roadway on yet more elevated 
land. The low, old style house beneath ye tall elm tree there was long since 
timbered, all but ye roof, from the remnants of the fort, and in the cellar you 
may yet behold the floor timbers with former framings. And I will tell you 
as well that the family owned land on the E. side of the present highway 

33 



where was the later, one storied two lower roomed house of ye Sargeant's 
son Jesse into which was built a bres summer beam from the early garrison. 
Also on either side of the road above & where now are pine woods, was 
formerly a pasture — A bit West of ye highway yonder, amid the trees, is 
the depression of a house cellar and a well, 'tis where ye Wakefield family 
dwelt formerly, that gave their name to the hill E, of ye pleasant road. Gaze 
now to ye North West where are trees thickly growing — Yon tract extending 
to the later Wise Dock, the family also possessed — and indeed much of it 
was once cultivated, as ye former corn hills in the woods, stones gathered 
from the land & lengthy fence mounds, upon which single lengths of rails 
were laid, will make us believe. Ye family generation of the early part of 
the last century ever averred that the site of ye garrison was by the border of 
the ravine by ye woods and on ye level ground of the field in rear of the bank 
facing the stream, and that ye palisade extended near down to ye present 
neighbor Furbush field, and they were wont to trace the river line of the en- 
closure, and also that of the ravine sidf, which indeed yet appears to be faintly 
visible, but to what distance toward the east into the field the work extended 
they knew not. as in plowing but little, if any vestige remained thereof former 
occupation. But towards ye front side many remains were found, such as 
broken earthen ware and dishes, and an indian stone hatchet. The positions 
of the chimneys of the cabins were then shown and the brick and clay debris 
belonging to them were found. Formerly such relics were removed from the 

34 



land in quantities. Also friend, ye depressions where ye cabins sat were 
then distinctly to be seen, as faintly they are today. Formerly, a few gun- 
flints, round leaden bullets & occasionally, antique copper cents were dis- 
covered in the garrison field, when it was being cultivated, and in later years 
a button, of the bigness of a half dollar, and seemingly of silver, with orna- 
mented fif^ure of a star engraved upon it, was turned up by the plow. And 
later search on an evident hearth-spot produced a perfect quahog shell, be- 
sides those of smaller bivalves in abundance, all mingled with fragments of 
rude bricks, scant remnants of wrot. iron nails, bits of glazed and unglazed 
earthen ware dishes and crockery, broken clay pipe, also charcoal in a per- 
fect state of preservation, and small fragments of bones of domestic animals. 
After the close of the French and indian wars the Larrabee family 
scattered afar, some of its members rtmoving to Scarboro — ^Joel a son of the 
Sargeant, in 1776 acquired land when- is now ye antient Larrabee farm on 
Kennebunk river, and removed thither. He it was who transmitted to our 
day the record of the faithful little companion dog belonging to the 
Sargeant, and that ever gave warning to him of the approach of an indian 
enemy. This little friend accompanied him whenever he visited the woods, 
promptly warning him of the near presence of a savage. A few of these 
dusky people were desirous of slaying the Sargeant, but the more sagacious 
ones of their company observed, "No, not kill him, he is an aged man, and 
cannot do us harm, but catch him." 

35 



The name Joel was a favorite title in the branch of the family that I 
have mentioned to you, for when the present honored representative of that 
name first saw the light of the world, the maternal parent desired to bestow 
upon him the title of Francis, but the father sternly replied, "No, Joel he 
shall be called'' and thus the antient Bible name was transmitted to the 3rd 
generation. Now besides the two sons of the Sargeant that I have before 
mentioned, there were also Stephen and William, and the daughters Mary, 
Lydia, Catherine and Esther. I will also tell you that Ex. Gov. Larrabee of 
Iowa of later years was related to ye Kennebunk family of this name. And now 
companion, you shall know of one or two of ye tales concerning the people 
or the form'ir times and of the garrison, that the fathers and mothers whose 
memories went back to the time of the Revolution have related. Ah, happy 
thoughts would visit us could we better know the social life here ot that day, 
when the Sargeant was one of the early Parson Little's first Deacons, and 
there were eighteen weddings in the Parish in one year! And did not the 
Sargeant and his wife Miriam mingle in the first dance at the marriage of his 
grandson Jesse, above, on the road yonder? And was it not the custom of 
the Parson at such a time to take two glasses of wine — the one for himself & 
the other for his wife, and did not the guests salute the bridegroom and wish 
him much joy? Surely I know 'twas thus by the word of one who partici- 
pated in ye scenes. And I will tell you how one Mr. Thomas Boothby was 
wont to relate that at the time of an Indian alarm when ye people fled to the 

36 



palisadoed refuge, a good woman living in ye middle part of the town quit 
her home for the fort, leaving a lone goose there "setting'' upon a nest of 
eggs. After a short stay at the garrison, the worthy housewife became con- 
cerned for the welfare of ye goose, and summoning her courage, and prepar- 
ing herself for the journey, ventured to the homestead, and returned to the 
fort in safety with the goose and her goslings. 

And it once so happened that a child of the garrison, belonging to the 
Sargean;, he who was much feared by ye indian inhabitants, even in peacea- 
ble times, wandered from the fort, and was intercepted by the salvages, who 
thereupon caught the best horse in the place, and mounting one of their own 
people upon it, and binding his lower limbs thus secured the child beneath ye 
horse's body — and so contrived, rode to and fro, up and down in this same 
field to vex the people in the strong house. But as the horse and his rider 
happily drew nigh to the fort, the parents gave direction to shoot, as they 
had rather that the child were dead than to be thus tortured. As ye musket 
belched forth, the savage slid beneath ye body of the horse, which sped away 
at a run — but by great mercy the child was at last brought safely to its 
parents nor was the animal injured. And f irther it was related by grand- 
father Gilpatric that on occasion when ye indians may have had the Sergt. at 
a disadvantage they assured him that they intended to lead him to Canada 
with them, but he answered them that he was prepared to go. Now there 
was a spot of clear ground up by ye parsonage where the horses were wont 

37 



to go to graze, and the Sergt. on a day taking his musket, went by that path, 
and ere long discovered his horse with an indian mounted upon its back, and 
other savages by his side. Directly he shouted to the enemy to come out as 
he desired to slay them — which proved to be too much of a surprise for ye 
gentry — and the Sargeant securing his horse returned home fearless. Now 
the aged informant of these events devoutly wrote that the glory for the 
rescue must be given to Providence who stood as some bright star in behalf 
of that generation. 

And now friend, that Sargeant Larrabee, yeoman and guardian of the 
infant settlement was yet living here in the last part of ye iSth century — is 
apparent from an existing deed, in which after the payment of one shilling 
duty, and of his personally appearing Apr. 30, 1793, it mentions that for a 
certain sum of money paid to him by his son Jesse and for the use ot a room 
in his house and comfortable support during lifetime of the aged mother, the 
Sargeant deeds to him the home lot lying on the Easterly side of Mousam 
river, between the lands of Samuel Emmons and Benjamin Wormwood, also 
50 acre? of land formerly purchased of John Sinclair, and 2-t, of the marsh 
previously bought of Nathan Wells Esqr. and a thatch bed that he formerly 
had from Jno. Cole, (The Sergt. being the owner of the lowermost Thatch 
Island as it was called in Mousam river — at that time comprising nearly 3 
acres of land) besides one half of the interests in the Saw mill and grist mill 
on the stream at the village near the county road with the Building and 

38 



Privileges belonging to the premises — This was his voluntary act & the Rev. 
Daniel Little was one of the witnesses of the deed. 

Thus his long life was closed by an act of forethoueht and care for the 
welfare of his worthy wife, the companion of his later years. 

Ah, friend, as interestmg as this locality is, we must now continue on 
our journey. Here in the near-by, adjoining field, which was formerly a 
portion of the Larrabee farm, there was once found in plowing a stone club 
nearly z ft. in length, besides several Indian arrow heads, one being a very 
perfect chipping, also an indian fishing sinker, But now we will cross ye 
fence, by this line of trees onto friend Butland's farm, here but a trifle below 
the surface (jf the ground on the high bank & in view of the river, was dis- 
covered a while since, during some excavating, a place of probable mdian 
burial, as the skeleton was in a sitting posture, Fortunately ye larger of the 
relics were recovered & in ye debris were two stone implements, the one being 
an axe ; the other which was some 14 in. in length, with end eased for grasp 
of the hand, was styled a weapon, but some persons named it a pestle for 
pounding ye maize with. At ye same time, near this spot, a copper coin 
was thrown out with the gravel, which if 3e later owner recognizes it among 
others, shows the figure of a shield & the words E Pluribus Unum with year 
1784 upon one side, while upon the obverse was depicted a horse's head and 
a plow. And besides, a very perfect indian gouge, once hollowed with much 
industry from stone, was espied & rescued from the sand. 

39 



And now you will notice below the row ot trees and at a little distance 
in rear of the steep river bank a slight rise of land. This is styled ye "House 
Piece" for upon it rested the small dwelling of John Look in garrison times — 
he who had taken Bethia Larrabee to be his wife, but after a time neighbor 
Look removed to another town, and John Butland, the Ship-builder dwelt in 
ye house, but some time later it was drawn up to ye highway yonder where 
it yet remains. 

Did 1 not once hear you speak of a former Ship yard on this reach of the 
river Sir? Yes, comrade, you did. I will now lead you to the quite noted 
site, and yet styled "The Butland Ship Yard.'' Observe, we descend the slope 
of the hill, below the steep, wooded river bank by ye same, altho. now grassy 
roadway used so long ago. Is it possible, is it possible? and could this 
sheltered spot at the upper limit of the marsh have once been a busy ship 
yard & did this stream by our side ever Hoat sea-going craft ? Truly so, 
companion, for here John Butland, the ship carpenter, who was born in the 
near by garrison in 1744 in time of war, laid the keels for and completed 12 
vessels of varying tonnage, one of the last being the small brig Triton meas- 
ured and registered at 139.70 tons, Oct. 26, 1802. whilst Sargeant Larrabee 
built one other craft here. And I will also inform you that the high land at 
the head of the marsh beside this grove was formerly styled "Yard Hif!," 
because ot the ship yard and landing at the foot of its lower slope, and that 
within recent years the bed logs, which supported the launching ways of the 

40 




Si I J , B i-f % , m: 





o 

h 

air 



=1 



yard below the steep hill side, were yet remaining in position, and also that the 
few existing logs of a wharf extended from the river bank And did not ye 
mariner John Wells, who dwelt, when at home from sea, in ye old homestead 
once down yonder, and whom our Captain at Kennebunk well remembers — 
once perform a voyage to the West Indies in a top sail schooner that was 
built on the Mousam river? And also did not ye same Captain's mother, who 
was born in ye year 1807, when youthiul behold a new vessel that was built 
upon this river being warped out of it, by way of the canal at ye rear of Great 
Hill yonder? And was it not the good fortune of our friend down there below 
on ye road, & who obtains his livelihood from the sea, to be acquaint with 
one aged seafarer, Wm. Littletield of Wells, who assured him that he had 
once sailed to ye West Indies in a square topsail sloop, that was built and 
launched upon this same Mousam stream ? Surely friend, these relations are 
true, but if you are yet incredulous, sit you upon the root of the oak that 
shadows ye old time launching place, and I will stoop beside you, & declaim 
the following contract of remote day that relates to this very ground whereon 
we now repose — Thus I will begin. 

"This Agreement made and Concluded on betw'-en Joseph Churchill of 
Arundel in ye County of York, Merchant of ye one Part, und John Butland of 
Wells, Ship Carpenter iu County aforesiid of the other Part. Witnesseth 
that the sd John for the Consideration hereafter mentioned — Promeseth and 
agrees with ye sd Joseph to Build and Completely finish ye Hull or Bodde of 

41 



a half Deck top sail schooner of about one hundred and twenty tons or there- 
abouts, of ye following Dimensions, fifty seven feet Keel, twenty four foot 
Beam and Nine feet or ten feet Hold as sd Joseph shall Direct and find all 
the wood materials, suitable for the same — Except such Wood as the Block- 
maker shall stand in Need of, and Deliver her Completely finished, below all 
falls or Shoals inMusum River by the fifteenth Day of August Next ensuing — 
the sd Schooner to be Built with all White Oak above Water, and all good 
Oak under Water, and to have, two streaks at the Hoor timber heads, and one 
streak under the Wales of three inch Plank, and all the out Board Plank to 
be Whiti^ Oak, and not under two inches and a half thick the ceiling Plank 
to be of good oak the Plank for the Decks to be good White Pine of the 
length of the half Deck, and two inches and a half thick the masts and Bow- 
sprit to be good White pine, and of Dimensions as sd Joseph shall Direct the 
spars of the Best Spruce, and the sd Joseph Promiseth to pay the sd John 
two Pound thirteen shillings and four Pence for Each and every ton that the 
sd schooner shall t m when Built the Pay to be in the following Manner, one 
fifth Part to be Payd in Cash — one Quarter Part in West India goods — one 
Quarter in Provisions and the other part in English goods at such a Rate as 
the sd Joseph sells for Lash Pay — the West India Goods and Provisions to be 
of the following Prices. New England Rum to be two Shillings per gallon — 
Molasses at one Shilling and eight Pence per gallon, Cotton wool at one 
Shilling and Eight Pence an ell — Coffee at one Shilling and four Pence a 

42 



Pound, Chocolate at one Shilling and Six Pence per Pound, Corn at four 
Shillings per Bushell. Pork at tour Pound ten Shillings and Eight Pence 
per Barrel. Cod fish at Seventeen Shillings per Quintel, and other articles 
of the the Provisions and West India goods to be at the same advantage — 
the Pay to be at — at or before — and to the true and faithful Performance of 
the Agreement and Every Part of the Same the sd Parties Bind & oblige 
themselves to the other, to the other in the Penal Sums of four hundred 
Poundsto be Paid by the Party failing to the Party observing the same — 
\n Witness the sd Parties have hereunto Interchangably set their Hands and 
Seals this first Day of November in the thirteenth year of his Majesties 
Reign — annoque Domini 1773 
Signed Sealed and Delivered 

in Presence of Joseph Churchill r°1 



Jacob Curtio, Jr. 



Amdins Burley 



Note the word all good 
oak under Water was 
interlined before 
Signmg and Sealing 



It is further agreed that 

the sd John shall be supplied 

with things as goods and Provisions 

as he shall call for them — '' 



This friend was far from being ye end of the work here, for a paper is 

43 



yet in existence signed Auijust, 1784, by one Joseph Storer, mentioning that 
work could not progress in the Butland Ship yard by reason of insufficient 
timber and plank — but that activities would be resumed when the supplies 
arrived. And there is also another paper relating to this yard, which I will 
read to you. 

"York ss Wells July 29, 1790 Then personally appeared John Butland Jr., 
Benj. Wormwood & Moses Drown and made solemn oath that (certain per- 
sons all of Wells and whose names I will not read) have tailed in supplying 
John Butland of said Wells with Timber & other materials for building a 
schooner as per agreement, which obliges said Butland to lie still for want of 
Work & the aforesaid Parties have failed in making payments according to 
agreement for said schooner. 

Betorc me Benj'n. Brown, Justice Peace." 

And was not Justice Brown ye same person who built ye Brown man- 
sion yet existing on Main St. in the town & also ye formerly very long, but 
now divided house, that was termed Barnabas Palmers's on the same street 
above it ? Surely so. And if you would see how the gentry of the town 
costumed themselves at that day now gaze at the miniature ol the able Justice, 
which I draw from its case to show to you. 

And thus we have reached a conclusion concerning the ship yard, but 
have you ever known how that a worthy dweller of this locality, near this time, 
who possessed a plot of land 18 3-4 rods wide, extending from ye Mousum 

44 



river marsh over to ye Kennebiink Landing heath out of his affection and 
good will to his three children, William. Susannah and Rebecca, gave to each 
of them a strip 6 1-4 rods wide for theentire distance? — Ah, me, would that 
we were better acquaint with ye homely ways of ye early day! 

And now may we picture the later days of the noted Ship Builder, who 
altho. once quite tall of stature was at last bowed by weight of years, and 
made nearly helpless by infirmities, but he was carefully cared for by loving 
hands in ye little house by the roadside, where one day as he was resting in 
his wide, old fashioned chair, pensively gazing into ye open fire, a child of 
tender age innocently gambolling about ye room, by chance grazed ye cane 
by which he was supported when he fell and was sadly seared by the live 
embers. In vain did the kind folk of the household apply cooling leaves to 
the hurts for within a few days' time the good man had passed to his rest in 
the year 1828. 

Sir, 1 believe most truly, I believe all that you have told me relating to 
the Ship building and those persons who took part in it, and now we will 
journey onward, for I desire to learn more of this historic stream and the 
former dwellers upon its banks. We will ascend to the top of "Yard Hill", 
and again pursue our way seaward on the highland — Look yonder at ye 
promontory like jutting of field not distant from which one aged Capt. Frazier 
and neighbor Furbish long since plowed up a collection of antient iron pots 
and kettles, which they ascribed to some dwelling once erected there within 

45 



reach and protection of the garrison above. And espy there— another 
pleasant headland below this spot, where is a dark headstone or two & also a 
newer white one among the wild shrubbery, for there we might linger awhile 
in the sunlight, and gaze off upon the mar.sh and river— This ground which 
appears to have once been long enclosed be a fence, was the former burial 
plat of ye Butland family & here rests the worthy ship builder and his wife, 
also the elder members of the Thomas Wormwood family. 

And now as we saunter on our way we may scuff about here in ye field, 
before r-aching the marshy inlet, at the slight depression on the low green 
eminence, styled "Clover hill," perchance we may discover indications of ye 
house site of Thomas Wormwood, the pioneer settler, who in 1727 affixed 
his name to neighbor William Larrabee's will document. Nov^ you must 
know that the original immigrant of ^e Wormwood family located on the 
Isles of Shoals, but in the year 1661 Jacob Wormwood came to the town of 
Cape Porpoise, & later, in ye reign of King George the ist., and ere the year 
1720 was leached, Thomas Wormwood the 3rd in descent from ye immigrant 
journeyed hither to make for himself a home and build a house upon the 
Eastern side of ye Mou.sum river. And Ah friend, 30U little realize the forti- 
tude of ye yeomanry of this and other families of our town in those, and the 
later time when they sought to establish independence from the King— for did 
not Abijah Wormwood write to his friends here at home in 1776 from Mt. 
Independence, Ticonderoga, that he had suffered everything but death in the 

46 



service — from want of provisions. He had also experienced defeat, and had 
been captured by the savages, but yet he blessed God that his life was spared 
when many of his soldier comrades had fallen about him. 

Now we will cross the marshy land to ye oak and pine wood beyond. 
But stay here a moment near the bank, at the foot of the long reach of the 
river from above, and where is ye bend, and at ebb tide ye sand island, on 
which excellent shellfish are found, and where the sea gulls often congregate 
in winter. For at this place our neighbor up yonder, was reposing a short 
while since, when what should he espy but four otters of a brown color, 
emerge from ye wood-side and scamper o'er this bit of marsh to ye small 
creek opposite In vain did he essay to o'ertake them and do them hurt with 
a club, hastily caught up, before the}- should reach ye river — Now shortly 
after this incident two Indian boys that the neighbor met gathering ye sweet 
grass here, assured him that it was the habit of the otters to visit the salt 
water at times to fish in the brackish ponds, after which they would return 
to the up river country again. 

Ah! here we are at the cellar in the woods nearly abreast ye head of the 
marshy inlet — See it has good depth, and a very evident line of earth covered 
wall at the upper surface about it, and outside near by lies a loose rock or two 
once evidently detached from the walls — for 'twas here that the homestead of 
John Freeze, one of ye early inhabitants, stood quite i6o years since & later 
when ye land now wooded was open. And does not the field now existing 

47 



below this spot yet bear his name? Indeed it does, Sir! And one of the 
resident folk, who dwelt upon ye road above, at the beginning of the last 
century — would in after years repeat that frequently farmer Freeze would 
make a neighborly call at the house where she dwelt, and that when a violent 
storm arose it was his habit to say — "There must be a drownded man in ye 
sea,"' because of ye disturbance of the elements. 

And now we may visit ye goodly bank and grove at the river side where 
by its shelter sits the fine boat, now 6 years out of water, & see it is near 26 
ft. in length & with 8 ft. breadth of beam & above 3 tons burthen. In service 
it was steady and worked well, carrying two masts withspritsaiis, and a bow- 
sprit near 10 ft. overboard with a jib. In ye overhanging stern behold a 
locker for spare sails and clothes — I assure you friend that she was built in 6 
week's time by neighbor Pitts on the road above, unaided, in a blacksmith's 
shop, on ye other river, and of a truth the craft nearly occupied the entire 
building. With a temporary board deck and dory tagging astern did she not 
once visit Jeffries Ledge, 40 miles distant from Cape Porpoise, with neigh- 
bor at the helm, remain out all night, and on the following morn sail with a 
full fare of great cod iish into Portland harbor without shipping the least 
water, so considerable was her breadth of beam — so light her bow, and so 
long her run ? Indeed she could scarce come up ye Mousam river, but at 
half tide. But a long rest is the "Black Cloud" now having. 

Well, friend, as we stroll onward, I recall that an acquaintance of long 

48 




5r\t*'':: 



:si«s? 



*f 



o 

o 

-J 
o 

v: 
u 

< 



residence here has assured me of collections of shells having been found, 
many years since, in the woods near by. Evidence, it is probable, of former 
Indian inhabitants. But notice — beyond at a distance from the river, in the 
half clearing & at a little above ye fresh water pond where ye good folk hus- 
band the ice in winter. There, among the pine stumps of considerable age 
is a goodly number of white rocks, the single ones each being quite sufficient 
for a person to carry. Surely you never beheld the like stones elsewhere 
hereabout, and consider — some resemble coral, fresh from the reef. Ah 
friend indeed they are coral stones and the incident of their discovery is this ! 
Ye aged Daniel Drown who came into ye world near the beginning of ye last 
century & who was formerly a dweller near this farm had not memory of ye 
land ever being cleared here, nor had it been cultivated within his time, but ye 
neighbor Barney up yonder, ever active for improvements, cleared ye land of 
the young trees, but did not espy the rocks until when ye fire was lighted, 
and all ye branch litter and leaf gatherings were consumed by the flames, 
when were seen ye coral rocks showing white in the soil, some of them on 
the surface while others protruded from it. It chanced that some were 
smooth, but others showed all of ye irregularity of the polyps work of the 
southern seas — Ballast rocks truly friend — ballast rocks believe me, removed 
long since, and deposited in this hitherto unused spot, from some small W. 
India vessel that then entered this river. 

And now as we ramble onward consider Comrade the marsh dykes that 

49 



we have eneo.n.ered i„ „„ ,„„ & ,,;,,, „„^ ^^^ ^^^^ .^ _^^^ ^^_^^^^ 
leve, with ye .a.sh b, reason o, ^rea. age. b„, ye. ,„ so.e ,e„g,h, i„ ac- 
companying ditch s,il, exis.. and see, i, extends ,ro. the ch.ster o. s„,a„ 
P.nes to vo„ gtove of oaks, once redeeming a p„„io„ of ye sal, ntarsh fton, 
>!-= .Me. And yonder is another dyke, presenting <,nite a barr.er to the 
water yet, having s.al, ,og work sparingly seen to offset its wash, this en- 
closes a considerable nteadow-There a, a short distance above it is a third 
dyke, skirting the higher land, and formingasafe mound npon which to j„t,r- 
ney. & beyond yet more distant is another embankment that boldly barriers a 
^alt grass n.eadow & creek within it, Ihese remains evidence earnest work 
once upon the land. And behold mnch flotsam & ietsam that have been brought 
by the spring tides discover their voyages ended on the outward sides of these 
old time dykes. Now inspect the litter, here is a gaunt birch tree stem there 
batrel staves & broken boa. boards, atmour „, crabs and lesser debris. And 
espy yonder is a cluster of driftwood gathered by some provident person tor 
future use. & which presen.s a s.udy by i.s vatiety-with bleached roots & 

branches of trees — the head of a rad- 9r ^fU u- 

me nead ot a cask & other bits of wood in many forms, all 

neatly stowed. 

Come now. we will sojourn onward though we tire, but observe, we have 
reached ye clay hill at last 1 Now we may ascend the low eminence where 
.he ocean is .„ lull view-As regards this location, the acquaintance who lives 
here relates o. a student o. history who once came to this site to ga.e abou, 

50 



saying that an Indian of some note formerly pitclied his lodge upon the hillock, 
but later removed to ye town of Berwick, & also that in af't':r time one Gillespie 
dwelt here — However that may be I can scarce say, but truly will intorm you 
that on this knoll & but a little distance before & a trifle only West of ye 
house, our friend now living here did in recent years exhume an antient iron 
vessel with its cover, styled a Dutch oven, & which was used to bake ye bread 
in b)' suspending it on the fireplace crane. While over the way yonder our 
other friend some while ago, adventured upon a heap of rocks, the uppermost 
ones being near even with the surface of ye soil, while the others were below 
it, & all seemingly blackened by tire once. Indian work think you not so ? 
as many shells left by them were once observed at the hillock above. 

And now may we descend to the near by bridge, incline against ye rail 
and gaze off upon the stream for the nonce & also to the West Shore above 
for a short way ? Yonder by the highway and extending above it. was the 
farm of neighbor John Wells, that was apportioned from the ancient family 
manor. Here our friend caused to be reared a roomy barn, himself and family 
occupying one end of it for a series of years. But had he not purchased a 
gathering of fine topping bricks intending to rear a substantial dwelling in 
some fortunate year ? And indeed he could have builded a small house directly. 
For at ye later time of the great Portland conflagration was he not proffered a 
handsome sum for his bricks, but refused to part with them, his ambition be- 
ing to construct none other than a goodly house.'' A worthy ambition indeed, 

51 



for if forsooth Col. Byrd once dreamed to erect Westover the imposing man- 
sion on the James, in the Old Dominion, what wonder if one of our own 
people should wish to rear a comely house, upon the bluff of the Mousum. 
Now I will inform you that neighbor Wells was a mariner, passing a part of 
his time only at his homestead, & you must know also friend that in former 
days the Ohio river was a route of travel to and from the South and New 
England, & that it once so happened that our friend was descending that 
stream upon a flotilla of barges when one of them chanced to touch the 
ground upon a sand bar, and remained there until the flow of the stream had 
washed all of ye sand away beneath the bow and stern of the barge, when its 
back was broken. This was then not an uncommon occurrence upon that 
river. 

Again, once when sojourning at home our friend purchased a considera- 
ble fishing boat in ye nearby town to the Westward, and it so chanced that 
when a propitious day arrived, two residents of the village above on the river, 
one of whom had been a man o' wars man, obtained the loan of the craft for 
a fishing venture off shore & the whilst they were out a severe blow came on, 
when the boat was overturned, but ye rock ballast falling out, and the craft 
floating keel uppermost, the two voyagers clambered upon it, and luckily 
drifted ashore with the boat undamaged. But nevertheless ye owner caused 
it to be drawn upon the West bank directly above the steep bluff that is at 
the bend of the river where is the island, & there it ever after remained, 

52 








y- 



y 

o 




bleached by all ye winds & weathers, and upon its stern could be read by the 
passer-by in leaden letters its name— the "Gem of Wells." 

And then besides, our friend once possessed what may have been the 
most considerable fishing vessel upon the river, a ten ton craft, with deck, a 
cabin and schooner masts & sails & which was styled the "Hornet." It was 
often moored below the bridge, and in it fishing & sailing parties were wont 
to venture out to sea— and with it voyages were made to Boston & the East- 
ward, & so clever a sailer was she that her later purchasers preferred to race 
rather than fish with the craft. 

Now above the homestead last described you will observe the marsh and 
pleasant sloping farm field with clustered bldgs. upon its highest part of the 
bro. Nathan Wells, and which is yet in possession of ye family, and that once 
formed a portion of the great home tract of above loo acres of pasture and 
tillage land, and loo acres of forest. In that time the creatures of the wood 
of one description or another were frequently discovered and deer were not 
seldom seen by dwellers of the farms in passing to & from the village above. 
It so chanced that on an occasion when bro. Nathan Wells was returning 
homewards & had reached the farther side ot the Fernald brook up yonder, 
•he espied a deer, the flintlock was cautiously raised to the face, then occurred 
the flash in the pan and the quick report, and two deer, the one having 
unobserved by the husbandman sauntered near the other fell by the same bul- 
let. But what wonder when indeed in these recent years the sprightly buck 

53 



and gentle doe have stared at the home folk of this farm from the knoll-side, 
near ye dwelling. 

Observe yon green hillock in the open field and near the marsh. It 
commands a most interesting view of the broad watery way of the river, 
standing so bravely Eastward with its myriad ripples. Also of the marshes 
and green banks and woods of the Northern Shore. Upon the hillock stood 
the early log cabin home of William Wells an early comer here, but the 
cabin was burned by the savages, and he removed to his later site on the W. 
side of the present road below the mansion of Esquire Parsons. This experi- 
ence could scarcely have been unheard of by him befon , as a forebear of one 
Patty Wells, when a mere infant, was with her maternal parent concealed by 
the father in a potato cellar, when the French and savages fell upon ye town 
of York in the far away King William's war. 

Friend, it was Wm. Wells who cleared the land, which we now behold 
by felling the trees and allowmg them to remain upon the ground until mid- 
summer, when they were burned, or else they were drawn together out of the 
way, by the aid of oxen and chains. 

In the creek, which winds from the river to the lower edge of the field, 

the succeeding owner of the premises was accustomed to moor a fishing boat 

in which he would venture to sea — return with a fare of fish, dispose of them 

* at the village above, and yet accomplish a good stint of work upon the farm 

in the same day, which was a worthy example of early N. England thrift. 

54 



And I will assure you that the traveled way to the village hereabouts once 
made a detour into the woods at some distance from the farm house, but the 
dwellers on the premises by their own labor formed a shorter route leaving 
the older one in the woods unused. 

But turn you, friend, on the bridge, and gaze yonder where the gulls with 
straight spread wings cross and re-cro=:s each other's paths low down, and 
anon disappear behind ye sand dunes, for there is the river's mouth. Oh, I 
like not that chill sea beyond, sparkling tho. it be ! Let us betake ourselves 
homewards by the upper river, and end this day's saunter, resting by ye oak 
shaded banks there, where on the river shallows those sun lit wavelets lap 
against the returning tide. 



55 



DAY THE THIRD 



Ha ! Ha! Kindly Associate our paths cross one anothers to-day! Not 
a few ruddy sundowns have faded and cloud shadows fled o'er this wide flow- 
ing tide-river since last we rested and communed together upon this self 
same bridge, but to-day we will 'finish our stroll. 

Do I observe you to reflect, pensive friend ? 

Yes, yes, I cannot gainsay it, many thoughts of former days take shape 
as one lingers here upon the bridge. Now friend, gaze down ye stream on 
the East Shore there where the long dykes are situated, which friend Went- 
worth and his foreman Fernald, and stalwart helpers besides, reared with 
honest toil in many a day gone by, and now showing numerous breaches, Ah, 
little reward had they lor their painstaking ! For two seasons the enclosed 
marsh yielded heavy harvests of English hay, but then, even within a few 
years after the shutting out of ye tide, the fresh marsh grew little else than 
crops of weeds, which with the cost of maintenance destroyed the profit of 
ye undertaking. 

Now over yonder where the pasture of our neighbor English extends to 
the salt grass, and near the river, an Indian stone hatchet was found long since, 
as I have heard ye elderly people relate. And now may your vision dwell 



on the West bank, and to the low hill by the way that leads to ye shore, where 
of late the chimney bricks and ancient, fractured iron kettle were exhumed, 
for upon that airy knoll sat the second dwelling of one Wm. Wells in 
Revolutionary times and earlier. Aye, methinks in 1759! It was a low 
eaved, comfortable dwelling, and yet shelters a home circle joined to ye man- 
sion yonder. Its builder came hither from the Western part of the then wide 
town of Wells, and from his door-yard here he could gaze upon ye lands 
toward yonder sea, and East to ye Great hill, and with his sight follow the 
river and its west bordering tracts of territory near a mile to ye North, and 
proudly exclaim, "This domain is all my own possession," 

Now with the father dwelt the sons Nathan and Joseph who also hon- 
estly held ye plow, and followed in their parent's footsteps. And I must 
acquaint you with the truth that the days had their frights in those years ; for 
as the young man Nathan was on a time returning to his father's dwelling 
from a visit to ye village above, by the woody way, with a basket of provision 
upon his arm, he was conscious of being followed by a wild creature, and 
hastened to reach his home upon the hill. Now as it chanced in that day, a 
fence encompassed ye dwelling: this the young man hastily clambered o'er. 
and scarce had he reached the door-stone beyond, when a bear raising itself, 
placed its foremost paws upon ye rail of the fence that he had bat just 
surmounted. 

Ah, and evening often brought its dread ! For upon a day after sun- 

59 



down, it was observed by the farmer and his family that a certain kine of the 
herd did not return to its home with the other cattle, and it was heard to 
lowe in an unusual distressful manner in the direction of ye seashore. On the 
morrow at early morning, ye people venturing forth to learn the cause of the 
disappearance of the creature, discovered but shreds of its hide and other 
scant portions of the unfortunate animal that had been destroyed by wander- 
ing wolves, or mayhap, a bear. 

Now to the West of the house on the hill, and on the lower land, reposed 
the commodious farm-barn, and near the house was ye stoned up well, and 
hard by the bank of the river, some small way above ye stony bridge yonder, 
was a living spring. While near by, on the same elevated bank of ye old 
river, and in his own field, were the works where Wm. Wells manufactured 
salt from sea water in ye Revolutionary period. 

Now before these times, in the day of the great Bashaba, the red men 
dwelt in full liberty upon these lands, as the husbandman well knew, for yon- 
der on the lower side, and near the Stony bridge, and but a little removed 
from the marsh land ; ther'^ where ye wild brush of late scantily grew, he was 
wont to relate, was a spot of ancient indian dwelling; for the space of the area 
of a house there was thickly set with the whitened shells of bivalves but a 
little below the surface of ye soil, and which were repeatedly turned up by ye 
plow when the farmer with his oxen labored upon the field. 

Ah, pleasant it is to dwell upon the memory of those virgin days ! Now 

60 



in later years when a follower of Wm. Wells and his son chanced to be fur- 
rowing ye land hard by, on the edge of the field that borders ye old river, but 
a scant stroll above ye old time salt works, on the upland there, but a bit 
only above tide water, they fell upon three several spots where ye indians had 
encamped long since, which was made known to them by the large shells of 
ye bivalves disclosed by the plow, and much larger were the}' than shells ob- 
tained in the later days ; and stooping, the son gleaned an arrow head from 
one of these former camping places. 

And direct your gaze there but a stone's cast below the bridge on which 
we yet linger, to the field bordering the river and the great house, where ye 
head of the family caused the sod to be turned up and graded for a small 
pleasure-court for the young folks. 

Then the workmen chanced upon a spot, which they at first resolved was 
one of interment, but later esteemed it to be the location of an Indian en- 
campment, as ashes were found, and a species of mould, which they judged 
to be the remains of ye bones of animals obtained in hunting ; but more in- 
teresting was ye finding of several perfect heads of indian arrows, which were 
recovered. And on the following season two well formed spear heads of ye 
aborigines were brought to light by the workmen in spading j'e garden near 
by this spot. 

But listen friend, have I ever discoursed to you of the stranding of the 
Alexander on yon beach during our later naval war with England ? When 

6i 



our Seamen's shout was "Free trade and sailors rights." You must know 
that an alarm was sprung in Arundel, and the children being released from 
school beheld two large vessels, with all their white sails spread, passing 
along ye coast. And on the river above us, the more able of the people 
clambered to the low roots ot farm buildings to obtain a better view of the 
happening. It was but a bit West ot ye Great hill where the vessel touched. 
Now 'tis said, that when ye Bulwark was in pursuit of the privateer, 
her people cast overboard a bag of gold, being resolved to lose it rather than 
that the enemy should come by the treasure ; and that in after times, the bag 
of money was brought up to the surface of ye water by the hook and line of a 
fisherman, but the hold brake, and the gold shimmered thro, the green water 
to ye bottom again. However that may be, when the vessel cams ashore the 
church bell at Kennebunk was set ringing, the people Hocked to the scene, 
and all the men upnn the farms went down to the shore, some armed with 
guns and others with pitch-forks, but Patty Wells kept her own house, and 
simmered those delectabies shaped like ye letter O in the fry-pan, and made 
of corn-meal, which was ye only commodity for the purpose then at hand, and 
sent them to the men folks, their protectors, by the children, who feared to go 
to them by ye way of Stony bridge, but made a detour and waded the creek 
to reach their friends with the d'-lectables. Now you must know, listener, 
that Stony bridge was at first begun in a rough way, it was a small construc- 
tion built by the neigh':)ors and nearby residents for their own use and 

62 



convenience, and was without a well beaten track leading to it, but a pair of 
bars and way down ye hill-side field were the means of reaching it. 

Now hard by on the seashore, another good wife dwelt who was very 
much alarmed by these war-like proceedings that I have described, and she 
hastened from her farm to our Patty, and importuned her that she would flee 
with her to the village above, but the heroic woman replied, "No, I was upon 
this ground first and here I intend to remain !" 

I will also inform you that cases of goods and pieces of merchandise, the 
proceeds of prizes captured, doubtless, were thrown overboard in the chase 
and drifted ashore nearby, and one good man, who gathered up a parcel con- 
taining silks, was accused by the townspeople of theft. Some of the villagers 
went near to take a sig;ht of the privateer. The afternoon was beautiful, the 
air still, the sails of the vessel stranded on the beaeh were all spread, but 
hanging idly from their spars. Now the commander of the craft, one Capt. 
Crowninshield, and his hapless crew, yearning for a shelter, plodded to the 
dwelling of Wm. Wells on the hill, where they were hospitably welcomed by 
him and his wife Patty, and they dwelt there for a time, the officers being 
entertained in the house, while the men were lodged in the barn, that I have 
before described to you. 

Gaze to tha Westward friend, beyond this near grove of trees where the 
good folks were formerly wont to resort to uproot the wild sarsaparilla to 
suspend in bunches in their attics ere ye winter set in, a scant fourth of a mile 

63 



farther on the highwa}', and a bit beyond the first small creek. For there it 
was that the ancient way, that on a former excursion I acquainted you of as 
passing near the West bank of the river, crossing the Fernald stream some 
short way below the present bridge, and that kept on through ye farms be- 
low and at last emerging from the woods and crossing this roadway, continued 
on to ihe shallow or wading place of ye old river at the first cove, or the 
"Pines" as tin- vicinity was afterwards wont to be styled, above Stony bridge. 
Ha, ha, how oft did Sarah Wells when a girl bridle the farm horse, and draw- 
ing fast the saddle girth, and lightly mounting ye animal amble from her 
home where yonder country-seat now is to the village by this early trail! 
But more of the ford Far back in ye time of 1760, or thereabout, over yon- 
der aiar on the hilly land East o! the river, a little below ye hotel named from 
the eigle that sits on ye shattered pinnacles, where you will now see a de- 
pression in the hillock, one Mr. Towne reared a sightly dwelling as housing 
for himself. In course of time. Yeoman Spinney became possessed of the 
homestead, and nothing daunted removed it to the headland beyond, at the 
shore and was buffeted by all the winds of ocean. After him came one 
Gillespie, a Scotch book agent, and dwelt in ye house until driven by the sea 
to take refuge in the village at the head of tide. Ere many years were 
passed another owner assumed control of it, and Joseph Wells over yonder, 
summoning the help of the Country-side, caused the house to begin its long 
journey in the winter season of 1823 to the Westward, by the grass land then 

64 



existing, far beyond to the old river ford, at the 'Pines'' that I have men- 
tioned, over which it was gotten upon skids, and continuing its progress along 
back of ye marsh and the West side of the hill, and over what would now be 
the barn-yard of the Country-seat, it reached its present position, with upper 
windows covered by boards, and its very large 2nd. story beams unwrenched. 
And now it chanced that one who since grew aged and passed to his rest 
was an infant then, and as the ark of family refuge slowly approached, he was 
held aloft in his mother's arms in the doorway of Wm. Wells's dwelling on 
the hill, and bidden to look. "Look child, our new found home is 
approaching. !'' 

And now friend gaze down the stream a little, a good part of the way to 
where ye old river debouches into ye new and where the high land joins the 
marsh, and on which spot small trees and bushes are growing, for there, at 
the steep bank was an ancient burial plot, where Wm. Wells the pioneer and 
other early members of his family were laid to rest. 

Little think you, follower, that these waters once reflected the masts of 
commerce. I will acquaint you a bit that way. Now some 60 years since, 
over yonder bordering there on the inside shore of the cove, a trifle Easterly 
of ye neck of Gillespie's point, even out where sand now lies, but reaching to 
ye neck, stood an extensive pitch-pine growth of goodly trees, the heart of 
each being largely of pure pitch, and belonging to ye Benjamin Wentworth 
family. And within them, but hard on the shore, a colony of tufted night 

65 



herons were wont annually to construct their nests of sticks. 

These woods were cut away, and the wood sent out of the river in vessels 
to ye Capital of the former Bay Colony. There was the schooner Volant, 
built in the year 1851 of some 54 tons burthen, belonging in Wells, and set 
up after fore and aft fashion, that sailed into the Mousam river and up it by 
the channel on the Western side of ye Thatch island, and carried wood hence 
which had been brought to near the clay-hill bridge. The vessel could stow 
some 40 cords of wood, and she lay at the Eastern Shore, a trifle below the 
bridge only, with her bow down the stream, without any wharf, but moored 
off the bank, and the wood was taken on baard in wheel-barrows, over a plank 
from the shore to the rail. And but a little above a day's time was required 
to lade the vessel, which done, she sailed out again, being piloted by Masters 
Drown and Wells, and some three visits she made here under charter of one 
Oliver M. Wentworth. who as a farmer's youth had previously journeyed to 
Boston, seeking for a larger business. 

And much other wood was brought to the rear of Great Hill below us, 
where some of it, by chance, was burned, and the Schooner Brilliant of the 
same style as the one that I have described to you, sailed into the river, and 
lying in the canal at the rear of the hill received her cargo. 

But a finer craft that ventured into the river at that day was the topsail 
schooner Wave, also built in 185 i, and of near 100 tons burthen, and which 
hailed from Kennebunk river. She was moored off the bank, at the rear ot 

66 



Great Hill, in the deep water, there in the canal, near where it joins the main 
river, and was secured by lines to posts set in the marsh. Her sails were a 
square topsail, which she used, a mainsail, foresail and two jibs. On the for- 
ward deck was a galley, and on the aft deck a trunk or companionway, which 
lighted the cabin below, where the master, one Capt. Wm. Bragdon, his 
officer, and three or four seamen waged at some $i8. per month each, were 
bunked. At this berth, like the one above, the wood was transported on 
board over a plank gangway from the shore. The vessel was a clever sailer, 
and when laden with quite 75 cords of ye commodity, she proceeded to sea 
in rough weather. This incident of the stay of the goodly vessel here I will 
relate to you. She at first lay in a channel on the Western side of the main 
river, but fortunately was warped over to the rear of Great hill the day before 
a severe Norther came on, which clogged ye channel that she had lain in, and 
as there was but little to hold her, the vessel broke adrift, and was near being 
blown out of ye river, dragging down to the point of the two streams, where 
slightly grounding she caught, and was held, and later was drawn back to 
her former position. 

Now another woodland had been cleared but a little South of ye Fernald 
farm, and the wood taken to ye seashore on the Western side of the river, 
when the schooner Equity sailed in, and lay in th° channel from which ye 
Wave was afterward fortunately warped. The vessel was moored to piles, a 
stage was built, and the wood taken on board in wheelbarrows, the vessel lying 

aground at low water. 

67 



Now in the later years, some effort was made to revive the commerce of 
ye stream, when Charles Parsons. Esq., who dwelt in his country seat on the 
far point yonder, caused a strong pile wharf to be planted on ye West shore 
of the stream near the sea, with a small house upon it, and a floating stage 
alongside. When, :ome 25 years since, the schooner Sarah of Wells, of 
near 51 tons burthen, was sailed in, and made fast to the wharf. Ah, and an 
odd craft she was, built in the year 1833, and having formerly been employed 
in freighting oak timber from Wells to Boston! She was of shoal draft, with 
cabin below decks, and possessed neither fore nor main topmast, but was 
seaworthy, and sailed hence with some 40 cords of wood, but later, alas, was 
lost on ye rocky York coast. 

But Oh friend, I bemoan myself of that unruly, restless sea, erst while 
hiding ye useful wharf in the dry sands of the shore, changing ye river chan- 
nels, swirling its tides this way and over yonder until, for instruction, but in 
vain for solace, we may again draw forth from the fold of our cloak that book 
"in vellum bound," and scan ye retrain of the poet. Even how that the 
*"Ocean old, centuries old, strong as youth and as uncontrolled'' has no ear 
for our complaints, and anon disports itself so cruelly! 

And I must make known to you as well, that at the time of the opening 
of the new river channel, one Capt. Gray oi the village above, and Mr. Joseph 
Wells of ye old farm here, being gents abreast of ye times, purchased of Capt- 

*H. W. Longfellow 

68 



Oaks of Arundel over yonder, a shallow draft schooner with fore and aft sails, 
styled the Echo, with the intention of bringing into the river cotton for the 
mill at Kennebunk, and goods for the stores there; freighting them in the 
vessel up the stream to the head of navigation. Now the clay hill bridge 
upon which we rest, had been designed for a draw-bridge, the timbers being 
cut tor such a structure, and they were ready to be used for that purpose, if 
occasion required. But the vessel did not proceed to the upper stream, altho. 
she visited the lower river on, two or three voyages. 

And surely my attentive listener you have ne'er been acquainted of ye 
hopeful enterprise of the townspeople in seeking a new river outlet in the 
year 1846, have you? Shall I relate it ? 

Most surely so, Sir, make no delay, for river-lore is vi^elcome chat to me. 
Now I will assure thee that the Alousam River Navigation Act — comprising 
10 incorporators was approved July 20, 1846 and an Act of March 8, 1826, 
authorizing a canal on the Mousam river was repealed Ye Company was 
to have the privilege of cutting off bends, building dams, embankments, 
wharves, piers, monuments, & placing buoys. It could also levy a toll on 
each vessel ol 10 tons and upwards, & demand reasonable wharfage rates, 
and have exclusive right of steam navigation on ye stream for 30 years. Ye 
first Capital stock was 5^2,500 — but this could be increased to ^25,000 if 
deemed expedient. The shares were ^25 each — without assessment and ye 
work was to be completed In 5 years or else ye privilege became void. Well, 

69 



we must saunter to the sightly land below the bridge yonder, there on the 
West shore where the view is wide spread Now you must know that the river 
course when modified before the year 1800, swam to the Eastward, by the 
channel styled the "Canal" at the rear of Great hill, and presently bending S. 
Easterly it followed on either side of a ledge coveredchiefly with small rocks, 
but also with a few large ones upon it, and remains of which are yet to be 
discerned, known as Ram island, the larger channel of the stream being upon 
the side of the main land, while' the other was but a shallow current. The 
river then debouched into the cove, at ye spot known as Gillespie's point 
neck, and presently was divided by a ridge of rocks, the greater channel be- 
ing upon the side of the point, while upon the cove side was a rivulet course. 
And but a short way below were the falls so termed, they being but a rocky 
shoal where the water ran off from the ledge and this was a ripple at low 
water, It was even then quite a little distance below to the outlet of the 
river, where flowing East of George's rock and West ol a smill ledge nearby, 
it entered the sea. When ye canal debouched thus the cove existed as now, 
but it has been much enlarged since that time, the roots of former trees now 
being discernible upon it. Then it was a more desirable harbor than now, 
and better for boats to lie in, but it was laid bare as at present b}- the ebbing 
of the tide, excepting in the river channel. There was not, however, the 
swift current in the river at other times as now. and the stream was better 
then than at present for navigation, and there was then much boating on its 

waters. 

70 



To reach Gillespie's point one then must needs cross the river. The land 
on ye ocean side of the canal between Great hill and the point, of which there 
was considerable, a wide space even, sufficient tor quite a farm, was a corn 
field, and I assure you friend, persons are yet with us, even neighbor Hub- 
bard yonder, who have labored for days upon it. At that period a person 
could drive a horse nearly all the way on green grass ground from Great 
hill to Gillespie's point, where the sod extended out nearly to the Eagle rock 
but a very short distance only intervening between them. 

Upon the outer or ocean end of the point 80 years since, was to be seen 
the abandoned cellar of the Gillespie homestead, the headland having since 
wasted much upon the seaward end as well as on the cove and ocean sides, 
and the course of the former canal would now lead it into ye sea waves. 

The funds for creating ye new river were obtained by subscription from 
the persons who could purchase the stock, and many farmers and other per- 
sons gave their labor, for there was enthusiasm for the work. Stock certifi- 
cates were issued picturing the hoped for future navigation of the river and 
showmg the Company organized, and the signature of William Lord, Presi- 
dent, and William B. Sewall, Secretary. Behold one, friend! In cutting 
for the new channel a straight course was made in the marsh on the Western 
side of the stream, and now visible, from below the bridge upon which we 
lately rested, and abreast Thatch island a short way above the present outlet 
of the old river, where a creek then passed through that way and jetties or cob 

71 




J 

g 

1- 



. s 

o 

r 



2 



<3 






^ 



^ 



works were made, since wrongly termed "Ye West India Wharf" to stop it 
the outer one being now visible. The inner one was to be seen 30 or 
more years since. 

The cut then continued to the sea wall and back side of ye beach. 
This channel filled up at the back end after the river formed an outlet for 
itself, and the channel above has now become mostly absorbed by the river 
and filled up, but a few years since a boat could pass through it at high water 
when an island was formed. 

Citizen George Wise was given the contract for $200. of blocking up 
the course of ye canal above Ram island near the cove, with some piling, but 
mostly rocks from the neighborhood, of which there were many, and did the 
feat expeditiously, profitably and well. The sand from the cove soon washed 
in, and completed the barrier. The location of this work, some rocks of 
which can now be seen on the shore, was for many years afterwards styled 
"The Dam" by the people of the vicinity. A dam or barrier of ballast or 
beach rocks was also carried part of the way across the river where the 
channel was narrow at the lower, rear side of Great Hill, where the waste 
of the shore has since been great on the East side, and where the tide now 
covers stumps and roots of trees not a few and hard earth in process of de- 
molition. While at the joining of the canal and river at the rear of the hill 
was an island of moderate dimensions where is now a minute one. And at 
the inlet of the old river was another considerable island created by the cut, 

72 



and styled the "Joseph Wells' thatch bed," which has since greatly wasted. 

Upon the morning that the new channel was to be carried through ye 
sea wall, every inhabitant journeyed thither, who could do so, and nearly 
every male pilgrim carried a shovel. Many persons who excavated at the 
time of making ye final cut for the new channel at Great Hill, hoped for, and 
thought it quite possible, that the treasure of Capt. Kidd would be found. 

All preparations being in readiness, and many persons present, the 
shovellers commenced their work in the morning at low tide, and opened the 
remainder of the channel. The ditch was not wide, and a plank spanned it 
over which boys accompanied by their parents sauntered. One merchant of 
ye town who was present, in a spirit of triumph bestrode the narrow ditch, 
ore sole being upon one side and the other on the opposite shore. This 
position he maintained as long as it continued to be safe, for the barriers 
erected to direct the waters out of the new cut fulfilling their purpose, the 
pent up river made short work of the sand of ye sea wall, and the channel 
was soon too wide to cross in safety. But in the interval, one of ye chief in- 
habitants, being much interested and elated, proceeded outside in his boat, 
with the intent of coming into the new river when the current had formed it; 
being the first to do so, and looking for a great harbor. But directly one of 
the near by seafaring folk with a, companion, procured a scow in the vicinity 
and pushing out, immediately rowed about and returning gained the honor of 



being the tirst to enter the new river. 



73 



All ot the work of this enterprise was performed by hand labor, and its 
cost was nearly ^5000, but men of sober thought averred that could the funds 
have been expended in blasting ye ledge at the "ripples" in the old canal, a 
better river mouth and harbor would have ensued. 

But espy, there on ye ancient or first river, at the full tide, and near the 
present new river outlet, is a channel extending nearly to ye sea wall, this as 
late as the year 1853 was a navigable passage setting seaward, and joining 
with ye new outlet, and each existing at the same time. On its Western bank 
stood for a spell of years two considerable fish houses, and boats of some 
bigness oft came in, and lay at them. This channel was supposed to be a 
bend of ye ancient river before it reached the later canal, but some 50 years 
gone by a severe storm, the same that set adrift the Schooner Wave, rao-ed on 
the coast, and this outlet was obstructed at its mouth by great seas washing 
the sand in. Thereupon ye ancient river broke through the. narrow neck of 
land separating it from the new river, and flowed directly into the stream as 
it now does. 

Well friend, we will descend the hill to cross ye Stony bridge ! Ah, the 
near shore here below the bridge has gained much in these later years, and 
on ye upper side the larger island in ye channel is of late formation, but the 
smaller one near by has long existed here ! 

But pause, we have not yet viewed ye Great hill beyond the river, where 
the outlook is surprisingly wide spread over much blue water, coves, thm 

74 



lines of promontories and other shores ! Ye considerable eminence is a dr}', 
densely packed formation of gravel, small rocks packed every which way, and 
an occasional bowlder. In former years ye hill was resorted to in the summer 
season by a large colony of bank swallows, its brow being perforated by their 
burrows, which gave an opportunity for the frosts of winter to effect much de- 
struction there, but now that the little birds have ceased to frequent the hill, 
ye sod and gravel have wasted less rapidly. Espy now the great bowlder 
that lies a bit beyond the hill near its foot ! Our kindly informant yonder re- 
calls the day when it fell from ye bank. And gaze beyond where the two 
bowlders lie, the one in ye water at low tide, and some 60 paces outside and 
Easterly from the hill. Friend, they were once imbedded in its side, and 
truly did ye yeoman Oliver Drown long since behold one of them dislodge and 
tumble to ye strand below, for the hill extended far out in that time, and well 
did farmer Joseph Wells, who once possessed that broad hill-side field, relate 
that it had wasted a fourth of its proportion during his lifetime ! Now it 
once chanced that William Lord. Esq., of the village above, purchased ye hill 
in part that he might acquire the right of removing ballast rocks for new ves- 
sels bu'lt upon the Kennebunk river to the Eastward, the right of so doing 
without ownership of the land being questioned. From the rocky point or 
strand West of the river mouth many tons of ballast rocks were formerly 
taken and carted to ye other river for the new ships, by Mr. Wells of the 
farm near by. 

75 



And, observe, a better part of the way down ye hill at the rear, where 
the cart track is deeply sunk in the turf and soil, tor there was ye King's way 
or ''Military Road'' that passed over yonder in days gone by. And towards 
the East end of the hill, on the lower side of the road, and not above a rod 
from it, you would discover a considerable mound with a rock or two pro- 
jecting from it, and that has long existed there, and would appear to cover 
ye ruins of a chimney, and at the rear of it nearer the canal is yet another 
mound. There stood ye ancient house, facing the South, that long existed 
at the back side of the hill, with its out buildings. 

Indeed, young folks in former days were shown the depression oi its for- 
saken cellar, and farmer Wells oft recalled the appearance oi the house itself, 
and the foreign immigrant who then dwelt in it, and of his boat also, and the 
occasion when this early inhabitant was pursuing his fishing upon the nearby 
sea, when being overtaken by a severe tempest and fearing destruction, he 
lifted up his prayers for delivery from it, and was safely brought to his home 
once again. 

In former years ye credulous ones resorted to the hill, and with spade 
and mattock turned over the sods and gravel in que -t of ye buried treasure of 
one Capt. Kidd, who "Spied three ships of Spain, and fired on them amain 
as he sailed." And indeed it would appear that unwittingly their efforts were 
not wholl)- ill directed, for scarce six years since, when one of the nearby 
residents was at ye hill, upon the cove or Eastern side, he beheld what he 

76 



judged to be a button jutting out of ye gravel some five feet below the sur 
face of the grassland, and upon pluckiner ye metal from the bank he dis- 
covered it to be a very thin French copper coin of some value, a two sou 
piece or penny, the equal or the tenth of a franc, and then, by the figures, 
stamped upon its face, being nearly 200 years minted. 

And friend, among ye rocks there at the river's mouth, many years now 
past, one of ye town's people recovered a primitive, rude smoking pipe 
fashioned from a soft variety of stone, and which he interpreted to be of 
Indian fashioning. 

Ah, I am led to reHect as we linger a brief moment on ye Stony bridge 
how ye flocks of the sea sometimes were as ye Hebrew people of old "en- 
tangled in the land,'' for did not a great shoal of herring appear in this old 
river some years now gone by, coming in with the tide ? But this they would 
scarce have done had they not been pursued by larger fish; and altho. the 
egress was free they were packed in, and could not find their way out again, 
because they were fettered by the sea weed, and embedded in the shallow 
pools by the receding tide. They were stranded in great quantities above 
and below this rocky bridge. Some of ye fish were large, others small, 
and they lay two feet or more deep in the creeks, many 'tis said doubtless 
dying before the water left them by overcrowding. A nearby inhabitant sold 
ye share of finny unfortunates resting upon his strand for a pretty sum of 
silver to the up country folk, to be removed in ox-cart loads for the fields. 

n 



It came about that some 35 years since, some observing persons know- 
ing of large bass fish frequenting the waters near the river's mouth, caused 
a goodly seine, knitted and loaned by Hartley Lord and Bros, of Boston, to 
be set a trifle West of the mouth of the New river and without its 
current, where the floor of the strand was smooth; and drawn daily dur- 
ing the tishing season, and many fine bass fish of goodly dimensions were 
taken. 

It has so chanced on occasion, that the silvery pollock have pursued the 
small fry into ye surf at the river's mouth, even to the shore, and have 
themselves become stranded on 5'e beach in numbers so great that the 
farmers removed them in cart loads to fertilize the land. 

Ye great sturgeon fish were once frequently seen in the river, and a few 
seals were known to disport themselves above ye clay hill bridge where of 
late we mused for so long a time. 

Now we will follow ye ancient way back of the Sea wall. But what may 
be the low mound of brick or stone and slight depression by its side near by 
in the pasture borderingthe old river here, and which is but little raised above 
the full tide, and upon which grass land in later years the workers upon the 
marsh were wont to spread their salt hay to dry? 

Then you have never known of the "Great hill farm'' on this way be- 
hind ye beach dunes, and of about the year iSoo, and so styled because it 
extended to and comprised Great hill and beyond it; and upon which rising 

78 



ground, and near by, pine trees were then growing? At the time of ve farm, 
there stood a fine wood of pitch-pine trees, and the ground was free from 
underbrush, and suitable for picnic purposes, on this barren sea wall that you 
now behold, and it extended Westward to yonder extensive rocky point, Of 
a truth it was all green land in that day from this spot near ye old river to 
Great Hill, but the farm did not include ye pine woods on the sand dunes, 
but reached to them. 

The owner of this river-farm was Isaac Topping, a former native of 
England, and who when grown aged, removed to the village above us. and 
passed the remainder of his days there. Here near the road, the broad, one 
storied farm house with large chimney in ye middle, sat, but in after years it 
was removed to ye Joseph Wells farm yonder where it was used as one of 
the appended buildings. Near the dwelling stood its large farm barn. At 
that time the way from ye village of Wells to Arundel, hereabouts, after 
passing the Little river followed not the direct course as at present, but per- 
formed a detour through ye woods to the North and East again, entering the 
present highway not far distant from ye Mousam River. And in that period, 
in the season, the householder with large basket on arm and visiting yon 
nearby rocky point, would fill it at one visit to the brim with ye great crusta- 
ceans, gathered at the ei)b tide in the salt water pools among the rocks. Ah, 
that was the time when ye Continent was new ! 

Bestir yourself kindly Associate, the sun is journeying to the West, ere 

79 



long we will behold "Horus on the horizon'' we must visit yon point and 
sightly hill before our return, passing thither by this undulating pasture way, 
which indeed appears to have once been formed by the waves, and crossing 
the Stony barrier with its several jutting planks raised against the ancient 
river in 1793; and also passing the water to the South of it styled by people 
of a former day "Ye eel pond" and to a small distance beyond it on the 
Western shore of the old river where on rising ground sits ye old time farm 
house upon which the tall balm of Gilead trees cast their moving leaf 
shadows. Ah, how fair the prospect is! But friend do not view this house 
as of very ancient date, altho. it sits upon ground inhabited by the white folk 
since a remote past. The dwelling can scarce have existed here previous to 
the year 1820, but another and earlier habitation sat by it, each existing at the 
same time, but on which site was later a deserted cellar only. Indeed, 'tis 
said that the first house or cabin here rested nearer toward ye sea than the 
present one, and faced the West. But it was on ye highland at ye distant 
part of the traveled road, where the way from Wells to Arundel passes the 
village track, that ye ancestors of the Hart family first found a home for 
themselves hereabouts long since, when journeying from the far town of 
Hampton in the former New Hampshire Grants, and bringing a part of their 
household goods in an ox-cart. But ye sheep they transported hither by 
water in a scow for fearofthe wild animals to be met vvfith in a land journey. 
Here for many years yeoman John Hart dwelt, and East of his large, two pair 

So 



of stairs house, stood a commodious barn and other outbuildings; also the 
early planted orchard, but now even ye house cellar stones are removed. 

After a course of years, a son Henry born at ye old homestead on the 
road above, altho. not young, married a youthful wife, and removed to this 
farm by the sea shore, purchasing the viride and valuable nearby timber tract 
of his brother Nelson. 

The extensive lay of land on the South jutting into the sea, and where 
much of the hay of the farm was cut, was termed "Point field,'' and when 
wind-harassed travellers journeyed along the -chore by the ancient highway, 
there then existed on the farm a blacksmith's shop, where the fariier would 
oft clinch a nail or set a shoe of the traveller's horse. Nearby, on this broad, 
sunlit shore, long since, a cast away seaman was pitifully lifted from ye sands, 
and laid to rest beneath the sods of "Point field," and long after ye spot of the 
resting place was known to ye dwellers ot the farm. 

Often on a Sunday would ye young wife don her cape and hood to 
saunter 'mid ye flowers and grasses of Point field, albeit the. once she was 
severely censured by her strict aunt for so doing on the Sabbath day. "Fie, 
fie, do you not recall that in the peaceful land from whence our forebears 
came, how that when ye steeple bells called to worship then would *"ye 
decent tradesman wend his way to the fane with his two daughters, each with 
her morocco bound prayer-book neatly folded in a pocket handkerchief ? 



Do thou the same! '' 

*W. Irving 



8i 



Now it chanced that there was not formerly a well at ye house on the 
farm, and in early summer the wife was wont to visit a natural font styled 
"Ye upper Spring" that lay somewhere on the hill-top, for a supply of water, 
while later in the season she sought the "Lower Spring," which was more 
enduring, and crossing two fence stiles to do so, and which flow of water 
gushed forth below there by ye pitch pine wood at the edge of the tide 
water. 

And on a time the good woman journeyed alone to a considerable dis- 
tance and upon foot, bearing ye white sheep's wool to be carded into rolls, 
which when perfected, she returned homewards in the same manner, and 
spinning ye wool and dyeing the yarn, she patiently knitted close mittens, 
and again wending her way on foot to a distant village at the Eastward she 
disposed of these works of her industry, and with the proceeds purchased for 
herself a warm overgarment. 

Look yonder on the slope of the field below and North of ye farm house; 
where many whitened shells were brought to ye surface of the soil by the 
plow in later years, evidence of a lodgement of the Indians in a far away 
time. But yon sun is scarce two hours high, we must not linger longer here, 
but retrace our steps b}' the way that we came. 

And now having again crossed ye rocky bridge, over ye former "Cape 
Porpoise river," and reached the rising ground where we lingered a while in 
coming hither, we may again turn our faces to that blue sea, for tales of 

82 



marine mishap hereabouts trouble my memory. Now view yonder a bit, 
West of the river outlet! Some forty years since a foreign schooner destined 
for Boston, and laden with lumber, laths and shingles, came ashore on ye 
beach in a fog in the summer season. Two days time were required in dis- 
charging the vessel, when an anchor was taken out astern, and the line hove 
taut, Ere long the craft was drawn into deep water again uninjured, and 
rioated to ye other river for a harbor. 

At another season in ye fall of the year, a small Province schooner laden 
with fish, and also sailing for Boston, was discovered to be close into the land 
at ye mouth of the Mousam river, but on the full of the tide. And luckily it 
chanced that neighbor Joseph Wells, whose home was near ye bridge, beh'°ld 
the plight of ye vessel, and hastening down to the shire at the debouching of 
ye river, by motioning and the making of signs with hands and arms, piloted 
the little craft into the mouth of the stream where she was anchored. 

Ye fragments of timbers now discerned yonder, are the remains of a 
vessel laden with casks of lime, that in more recent years was drifted on to 
the bar or a rocky strand, a little beyond the river, or toward the sun setting 
with cargo burning. That portion of it not consumed was salved with shovels, 
when ye bilge and other unburned parts of the vessel were later washed high 
upon the sands. 

Now it once fell out that beyond Great hill, where upon the upper side 
of Gillespie point is the gravelly bluff ; on Christmas-time quite fifty years 

S3 



gone by a Province Schooner of some 150 tons burthen, that had made a 
voyage to ye straits at the North, and traded for, or become possessed of a 
cargo of furs, which was freighted to Boston and sold there, and had taken 
on board stores of flour, shorts, etc., for her home port, was after sailing, 
beset by a snow squall, and allowed by h-r people to drive, when she brought 
up under the bank of ye Point I have shewn you. Ye vessel was badly worm 
eaten, but could have presently been gotten off the rocks, had not some de- 
signing person at night, separated her planking with an iron bar, for she was 
highly insured, and allowed the hold to fill with water. The craft was pur- 
chased as she lay, by one Capt. Oakes and Mr. Lewis Wormwood, when 
venturesome neighbor Hubbard over at ye cove, and other persons, stopped 
ye leak and she was drawn fiom her rocky cradle and sailed to Arundel, where 
new planking was done, and sufficient repairs were made to give the large 
schooner American Register and papers, when she was renamed the "Rover's 
Bride" and took the sea again. 

Indeed, the same rocky point "Stopped the way" against yet another 
craft a bit larther outward toward the extreme end of ye point, but scant 
years later, when ye small Provincetown fishing schooner Gleam of some 
forty tons burthen came on to the rocks in a fortunate bight of the shore, 
when she was presently purchased by neighbor Hubbard and Capt. Oakes 
for $150, drawn from her perilous berth, gotten to the nearby seaport town^ 
careened on the flats there, repaired and resumed her fishing voyage. 

84 



But can you scan yet beyond and East of the Gillespie point, where a 
narrow channel at ebb tide separates it from Black ledge, and beyond that 
even to the cove, where ye headland formerly styled "Two Acres'' juts into 
the sea ? There at the main land end were the works in ye Revolutionary 
days for the making of salt. At ye extreme farther end the land has not 
wasted or changed, but on ye cove side of the middle space it has fallen 
away much. And farther beyond towards ye extreme end were formerly the 
graves of seamen from a luckless brig, that was long since conveying a 
cargo of iron from Russia, and which was cast away on ye ledge a bit outside 
the point, and since bearing ye name of the cargo, and all of her company 
lost, They were buried on ye point, but the ever restless sea in after years 
crumbled the land, and ye whitened relics were oft discovered fallen out 
upon the strand. 

And now reverting your gaze to ye mainland back of the point where on 
the near hill sits yon summer hostelry, there and on the highway beyond it 
ye yeoman Nahum Wentworth, born in the town of Rollinsford, in New 
Hampshire, in 1774, and his brother Benjamin emigrating hither in 1803, and 
purchasing a considerable tract of land and marsh, and apportioning to each 
his farm, peacefully, established themselves in the pursuit of tilling ye soil. 
Now in the lower end of ye field of the former brother was an ancient clay 
pit and brick kiln, the pit now filled with brush. There many old time bricks 
fashioned by hand and rudely so, were found, and not a few recovered for 

85 



future use. But by whom ye kiln was made or when it was used was never 
learned by this early husbandman, nor any of his children. Ye low eaved 
dwelling oi the brother Benjamin rested on the hostelry hill that I have men- 
tioned and as one journeyed tow^ard ye sea and but a bit East of the road, 
where you now espy the yellow^ store house. The decrepit apple tree now 
near this building, stood at the house rear door, and hard by the house sat 
the barn with its shed like lean-to to shelter the cattle and the overhanging 
rafters of which were thickly set with the mud built nests of the eaves swal- 
lows. 

"Your description entertains me much companion. How rare now are 
those tranquil, domestic scenes of the past, but pray what may the raised, 
irregular plateau ot ground in the corner of the field, a bit below the site of 
the former homestead imply? I have observed it oft before. It has a sightly 
position surely, and is separated from the roadway by a stone retaining wall; 
and when the field has been ploughed this spot has been avoided by the 
coulter, and not a furrow turned upon it. And there are five considerable 
rough, flat and for the most part, field stones lying there, marking graves I 

suppose ?" 

Alas, that is their import friend ! Harken to this brief tale of misfor- 
tune. It was Easterly of Great hill there, as I have heard ye fathers and 
grandfathers hereabouts relate of the happening. Yonder on ye 
Western shore of the outer part of the Gillespie point, where you esciy the 

86 



the "Brig Ledge" exposed at halt tide, with the foam now gathering white, 
"like the blanched lip," about it. And the rocks were so styled because an 
unfortunate foreign vessel of that rig without cargo, and blown far from her 
course was long since dashed, and all broken up. Some of the crew were 
drowned and others partially so. They were gathered up by kindly farmer 
folk and some cared for at ye former dwelling of aged "A.unty Boothby," as 
she was wont to be known, yet farther East. These people recovered, and 
ere long departed for their homes at the Eastward. Others ot )'e ship- 
wrecked seamen were carefully nursed beneath ye roof tree of the Benjamin 
Wentworth dwelling, that I have just described to you, but alas these 
"passed hence," and wer£ laid to rest beneath those field stones that you 
have described ! Ah, there friend beneath ye sods of this sightly hill-side 
field they sleep, thro, sunshine and cloud, shadow and storm, and yonder is 
the bright, azure sea ! Truly comrade, well may we rest our faces in our 
hands, and muse on that spirit of poesy, so well typified in that far, glimmer- 
ing and sparkling sea, that anon destroys. Think of those hapless ones that 
repose there, thro, sunshine, and rain from the passing cloud, yea beneath 
ye field grass and the rain beaten and anon sunlighted turf, and bewail the 
spirit of poesy. 

I have but a bit more to relate to you when we will depart. You must 
scan the rocky seaside hill but a trifle at the rear of the shore where ye 
lordly hotel sits, for there was to be seen a few years back the cellar depres- 

87 



sionof the once comfortable dwelling of Great Grandfather Richard Boothby, 
who came to this region in an early time. But after a course of years the 
ancient building, which had served as a garrison, to ye residents hereabouts, 
they resorting to it in times of indian alarm, and which the traveled road by 
the seashore closelyapproached before pitching down over the hill, aye, skirt- 
ing its very side and nearly touching its door stone, falling into desuetude, its 
frontdoor on the Western end, as Pharoahs chariots, drave heavily on its long, 
wrought iron, barn door hinges; and the clapboards of the house walls for the 
space of two feet above ye ground having mostly dropped away from repeated 
banking of sods for warmth in winter, and the building not being worth re- 
pairing one of ye sons caused a very similar dwelling to be removed from 
Arundel, and set a trifle to the Westward of the former situation, as that had 
been much too airy. 

There ye family descendants dwelt until Farmer Hodge possessed the 
domain, near sixty year now gone by, and constructed another story on ye 
house, which long after remained a landmark there. 

Behold the hillock yonder with ye oaks, and which, long since was 
possessed by a colored servitor of one Thomas Boothby, the son of Richard, 
and was ever after known to ye inhabitants by his sobriquet. Ah, many a 
homely scene have these old time shores produced, when as ye aged people 
have related, some good housewife of the past would go forth from her 
door but a trifle, and pound a measure of maize in the ledge before her house 

88 



with a suitable shaped stone, as ye Indians and early comers here were wont 
to do in days gone by. 

Now gaze yonder if you may, yet farther Easterly, to the level land at 
the rear of the sea beach before one reaches the hostelry styled in honor of 
ye early Hampshire Grants, fcr the locality there was by ye older inhabitants 
known as "Gibson's yard," because of a former dweller on the land of that 
name, who was once laboring in his cornfield with his musquit lying close 
beside him, and which he removed from one corn hill to another as he pro- 
gressed wfth his work, but for a' that a wiley savage appearing out of ye 
wood took his life by a shot from a fire-arm. 

But now in fancy do I behold the spars and tall masts of the hapless 
barque Horace, silhouetted against the storm troubled sky as she rolls in ye 
surf at the "first beach," just beyond the 'Two Acre Point'' not very far 
distant from us. 

However, we must not linger longer here ! Hasten friend, and as we toil- 
somely regain our homes by the same way that we first came hither, I shall 
complete my narration, by recalling and relating to you the story of the 
vessels stranding. 



89 



3>=g5L2S;^ 



MISHAP OF THE HORACE 



Attend to my words patient listener ! Now as I strolled by yonder shore, 
but scant weeks since, I viewed the timbers of ye vessel, that I have 
acquainted you with on the Strand, and the wavelets coursing among them. 
I shall now relate to you the tale of the hapless craft. 

Well, you must know that one Master * * built her down at 
Scarborough in the year I S27. The Messrs. * * of Arundel, owned ye 
greater part of the vessel, the brother * * being "ships husband", Yes, 
and Capt. * * of Kennebunk, owned a piece ; and also Capt. * * 
of Arundel, who commanded her, with his brother acting as mate. 

Now, she was bound from New Orleans to Liverpool, with a full cargo 
of cotton, near 1300 bales. She was a vessel of 389 tons and this was her 
first voyage, in fact she had never made a voyage. 

She was a good barque, black, sided with some stripes about her. The 
crew, some dozen or more, gathered at New Orleans, were all strangers, a 
mixed lot, with some foreigners amongst them. 

Now it chanced that a story passed among these men, that the vessel had 
brought a general cargo from some Northern port to the Southern City, and 
that a surplus of the money provided to purchase it was yet on board, some 
$25000; be this as it may, e're long they laid plans to gain possession of ye 



craft. They would destroy the Captain's life, but preserve that of the mate, 
for he might later serve them. 

Listen friend, and consider how tales pass from lip to lip. Some persons 
declared that ye Captain and his mate were impetuous, but Mr, * * who 
was on board the vessel later did not discover any action like this. 

The sailor's plot accomplished, then they would scuttle or lire the barque. 
But it chanced that the cook, a Swede, and who was also to perish, overheard 
these bad men's speech, and \varned ye Captain, and he laid a counter plan 
of his own to secure them upon the first appearance of mutiny. Ere long 
several of them were seized, and lashed with cords, for there were not any 
irons on the craft, and in the melee the mate was injured. The vessel now 
being short handed the master endeavored to make ye port of Boston tissaid, 
but wind and tide prevented, and when off this shore he chose to sail for 
Arundel, for there his owners were and his family also. He would place the 
men who refused to do duty on shore, and secure others in their places, and 
would remain over a tide or two only. Ah, friend, we would that he had not 
made the mistake of anchoring in an open roadstead, instead of proceeding 
to Portland, where there was a safe harbor and the U. S. Court sat, before 
whom only his mutineers could be tried ! Some persons averred that the 
crew believed that they were sailing thither, and were assured that ye old 
observatory on Point Arundel was Falmouth lighthouse. However that may 
be, the ill fated barque anchored inside yon fishing rocks, near the river's 

92 



mouth on Wednesday the 2nd. of May. 1S38. Now. when the report reached 
Kennebunk village, that the Horace was off the bar, some of the boys clam- 
bered by the ladder to ye Unitarian church belfry with a spy glass to take a 
look at the cra.t, for it was out of the common course of happenings for so 
large a vessel to come hither. 

The mutinous sailors were at once set on shore, and transported to Port- 
land, and one of our townspeople who viewed them as they were landed 
declared that they were a sheepish appearing lot of folk. 

Ha, ha. there were worthy Messrs. "'^ * and * * serving on ye 
jury at Portland at thi,s season, and they had but just been discharged from 
it, and had sauntered up. to ye tavern to dine, and had ordered their horse to 
be harnessed ; Aye, and were prepared to commence their homeward journey, 
when ye marshal appeared, saying "You must remain here, some mutineers 
have been brought to town in irons from Arundel"! Indeed, 'twas said that 
the very appearance of the men would prejudice one against them so forbid- 
dmg was their appearance. This additional duty detained our friends from 
home another day. 

Now new seamen were procured for ye vessel, one, our acquaintance 
* ^ and other persons from hereabouts were sent on board the vessel. 
But all of these proceedings caused unlucky delay, for the wind arose, and 
blew furiously all day Friday and Saturday from E. S. E. Indeed, it must 
have been a severe blow for various of the villagers at K. upon meeting with 

93 



one another remarked thu ye conditions "were serious" for the vessel at 
anchor, and another person who dwelt hard by the shore, visiting it and 
viewing the craft straining at her chains exclaimed "Shi will not weather the 
gale" At the commencement of the blow several persons went out to 
remain on board the craft for the night, Capt. * '"'' being one (an 
experienced pilot) another Capt. * * (a capable seaman) Capt. * * 
was also on board, with his mate and a 'ull crew. 

The wind disported itself so violently that other persons who would, 
could not pass off to ye craft. Indeed, 'tis said that at this time ye sea waters 
invaded the fields. The barque was with both anchors down with chain 
cables. Now on Saturday night the 5th of May, one of the chains parted for 
the strain was too much for her. On seeing this happen, the Captain fearing 
that the other chain would not continue long, at about 15 minutes before 12 
o'clock slipped it, and at the same time ordered all hands aloft to loose the 
sails intending to work the vessel out to sea, but in this extremity by wind 
and tide the barque would not obey the rudder, and ere the men found time 
to do their work they heard the Captain shout for them to come down, for you 
must know that he had heard the breaker's dirge. Thereupon, down they 
came, but scarce had their feet touched the deck or their hands let go the 
lines, when ye vessel struck on the "Half way rock'' off Oakes's neck there, 
half a mile distant from the anchoring ground. Some style this ledge ye 
"Wash rocks," and declare that the vessel left her chain lying across them. 

94 



However that may be, here she remained for 15 minutes bumping heavily, 
and 'tis said, lost her rudder, stern post, false keel, and was bent or hogged 
by the rough usage, besides filling with water. Had the cargo been aught, 
but cotton, or had she remained longer on the reef, the vessel would have 
foundered or gone to pieces, and all persons on board possibly perished. 
However, she rose 011 the ledge with the surge, beat over it. and again drift- 
ing half a mile Westerly came ashore upright, broadside on, with masts all 
standing, at night, mid a tremendous surf, for the gale yet continued and it 
was high tide, on Boothby's or th° "first beach," some 150 yds. from high 
water mark and hard by ye "Two acre lot.'" 

Now the Captain fearing the vessel would go to pieces, in company with 
ye mate and one or two seamen, lashed himself, and swung overboard. Well 
may we pity the poor Captain for he was much grieved at the loss of his 
vessel, and informed two oi his owners later that were the event to happen 
again he would wish to perish with his vessel Alas, the barque was ere long 
beaten around with her end seaward, and settled in the sand. 

Our friend, Mr. ^ * stepping from the rear door of his house in the 
early morning was surprised to behold the masts of the Horace rising from 
the beach, and proceeded thither. The Captain was near by ye vessel, and 
his appearance our friend viewed with favor, and as the rain was yet falling 
he offered him the protection of his overcoat. 

On Sunday morning, when the mishap became known at Kennebunk 

95 



re 



village, the people went down to the shore in large numbers, and the 
beheld the craft appearing very large upon the beach. At low water one 
could saunter around her as now. This was a picture of ill luck. There was 
Mr. * * father of the principal owners with a large, old fashioned camlet 
cloak, wading out as ye tide arose to rescue articles thrown overboard by 
persons on the wreck. At the back of the beach was the longboat, with 
various members of the crew lying about it. When the tide was down the 
boys assembled beneath the sides of the vessel, and one of them residing in 
Kennebunk daring the boys of Arundel climbed safely on board the craft by 
a rope that dangled from a spar overhead. 

Well friend, operations were at once begun on Sunday morning to get 
the cotton safeiy ashore, and to dismantle the vessel, and a busy scene it 
presented I assure you, many oxen and men being employed in the work, 
which could be done only at low tide. Boats could not be used in this under- 
taking. By the afternoon of Sunday the deckload had been all taken off, and 
part of the cotton betvt^een decks — some loo bales. Some of the sails and 
rigging were also safely brought on shore. A breach partially stove in the 
bow, was made larger by removing some of the timbers, and a portion of the 
cargo was rolled out there. The cotton in great quantities was heaped upon 
the back of the beach, and on the "Two Acre" point. The cotton was wet, 
and ye fields were full of it. Our townsman Mr. * * declared that he 
would not have previously believed that so many bales could have been taken 

96 



from so small a vessel, and a portion of it, several tiers, 'tis said was not 
salved, because it could not be reached being mixed with water and sand in 
the lower hold or bilge. Now the weather continued very pleasant after the 
great storm, but it was difficult to remove the cargo, and a week at least was 
occupied in doing this work. The cotton was of excellent quality, and some of 
it, recovered by the residents of the neighborhood, was in existence for a 
long time afterwards. Indeed the farmer's daughters spun and wove domestic 
fabrics from it ! When the cargo was all out of ye wreck it was widely adver- 
tised at Lawrence, Lowell and other manufacturing places about Boston, and 
many persons came from the Westward when the auction was held, deeming 
it a good speculation to buy the commodity, and the cotton was said truly to 
have brought a better price than it would have if delivered at Liverpool. It 
was noted that a gentleman from Portsmouth, N. H., purchased ye greater 
part of the cotton. 

The cargo was reported at the time of the disaster to be insured in Lon- 
don; and the vessel and cargo with the freight were estimated to be at above 
$100,000 value. The barque and freight were insured in Boston for $31,500, 
and this claim must needs be adjusted, the owners abandoned ye vessel to the 
underwriters, but they argued that the Captain went aside from his proper 
course in the voyage, and the contest was long and haggling. Respected 
Mr. * * was called upon to appear as a witness, the underwriters con- 
sidered that ye vessel was hogged only, and could be gotten off the beach, 

97 



and Mr. - ^ was sent to view her. He discovered that the right or star- 
board side was truly out of shape, being thrown up quite one foot, and the 
bilge or bottom of the unlucky vessel was all broken in, The Court found 
that the Captain erred only in judgment. The vessel did nut lie l(jr a long time 
in this condition, only while ye case was beins decided, which when accom- 
plished, the work of demolition began. Spars, riggingand masts came down, 
and were, tis said, later used for the barque Isadore — but other persons say — 
ye Finland. Mr, "* * the blacksmith purchased the hull for the iron and 
copper that it contained. The planking was stripped off, and the top sides 
taken down as low as the tide would admit of the work. 

There was some thought 'tis said, of blowing out ye wreck with powder 
or torpedoes, but that science was not so well understood then as now, and it 
remained undisturbed. The anchors and chains were recovered. 

Now for ye wicked mutineers, the first cause of all this misfortune, bills 
were found agamst each of them on Saturday, May 5th, by the grand jury of 
the U. S. Circuit Court at Portland. Each prisoner pleaded not guilty. The 
same day they were again brought into court. Two of them pleaded guilty, 
and were sentenced to 60 days imprisonment in ye County Jail, the other two 
were discharged. 

And now friend as we have nearly reached the end of our Stroll, ere 
passing the wood and field to our homes we may gaze again upon the river 
as the fresh leafage is parted by the strong, summer breeze. And truly 

98 



Companion, as we view the time-honored tide-stream, full to the brim, its 
waters so blue beneath the sky, laving its banks so silently, so soft its touch; 
and now shaded, now light with myriad changing sparkles, solitary, lonely, 
ever the same, and with ye soft green and deep shade of the groves of mid 
summer with the afternoon light of the sky over them-on its lower course. 
Ah, then we yearn, and look so wistfully to learn from the mute river the 
whole story of its life; but alas, it is indifferent to our interest, and for the 
most part hides its ancient history in its almost speaking waters; and the 
emotion of our own thought is our only answer. 



99 



24 19)2 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 

Ml I M llll III! 



014 041 275 2 



